
Glass£iaiL 



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I'RKSRNTIjn n\' 



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WILLIAM ncl'xIMLCY 
President 



THEODORE ROOSEVELT 
Vice-Presiderit 




I George Washing'on 2 John Adams 

8 Martin Van Buren 9 Wm. Henry Harrison 



PAST PRESIDENTS 
3 Thomas Jefferson 4 James Madison 5 James Monroe 6 John Quincy A.iams 7 Andrew Jackson 
10 John Tyler n James K. Polk 12 Zackary Taylor 




PAST PRESIDENTS 

13 Millard Filmore 14 Franklin Pierce 15 James Buchanan 16 Abraham Lincoln 17 Andrew Johnson 18 Ulysses S Grant 

19 Rutherford B. Hayes 20 James A. Garfield zi Chester A. Arthur 22 Grover Cleveland 23 Benjamin Harrison 24 Wm. McKinley 



Washington's Smooth Streets 

ECIDEDLY the beauty and grandeur of Washington (_ity — next to its superb 
Public Buildings, is due to its many miles of asphalt streets. It is the 
cyclist's and the automobilist's paradise. 

Cities have long ago discovered that smooth pa\-ements are among its 
best investments. Smooth pawments invite capital and trade. They improve 
real estate. They increase the population. They enhance the wealth of the 
city. 1 hey decrease the mortality rate. They decrease the cost of street 
cleaning. They prevent noise. They save wear and tear ()n \'ehicles. 
1 he one concern responsible for the largest number of beautiful streets in the City of 
Washington, and the cities of America for that matter, is The Barber Asphalt Paving 
Company. Their business extends from ocean to ocean, and while visiting Washington and 
admiring its well-paved streets, make a note to bring the matter to the attention of your 
mayor or city council when you get home. 

-ehe ^AH-BEF^ ^STHALT TAVIJSfG CO. 




LE DROIT BLDG., WASHINGTON, D. C. 



11 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY 



I A business triumph == the A*^^***^^" .^.';^P*^!^£**^'!^ ^^:| 






X 1 "The highest order of enterprise," "rare genius in ^^^ 

^u The -reat success attained by the American Grapho- njanagenient," are two of the many expressions of praise ^ 
J|. ^ phoneCompany, of New York, reflects credit upon p^^^jj^jy bestowed upon the American Graphophone ,,^ 
4 one of Washington's leading citizens. [Company's executive officers. To President Edward D ,^^ 

4l' In i8q^ when this Company came under its present; gaston, who is also the General Manager and Counsel ot ,^^ 
4 uaanagen?;nt it was a bankrupt institution. Today, it'.He Company, belongs the lion's share of the credit for ,, 
^paTSv n pe cint on its preferred stock, eight per ^he success of one of America's leading institutions, and .,|, 
^'* cent ous common stock, on a total capitalization of Washington proudly claims the Columbia Phonograph .,|. 
^" cent, ou jgocooo In the past few! Company as one of its most substantial and prosperous ,|| 

years it has paid its share- Ip^teges. '"* 

holders over $400,000 in; 

dividends, leaving an in At the Company's facto 



S\> 




creasing surplus that does ry^ much of the advance 
not fall under a quarter of! made constautly in the art 
a million dollars cash, and!ot construction and inven- 
this after acquiring an' tion, isdue to A s si s t a n t 
enormous factory wilh a Manager Walter P. Phillips, 
present pay roll of $10,000 also a Washingtonian. 
a week, establishing officesi 

in all the principal cities of The Company's elegant 
the: world, and placing sue down-town offices in New 
cessfully upon the market A^ork City, at the corner of 
twenty distinct styles of B r o a d w a y and Liberty 




Assistant Manager Pliillii.; 



Toy the $si Street, is one of the most 

" 'conspicuous and magnificent of the new sky-scrapers. 



^'* graphophones, ranging in price from the 

^'' Graphophone, to the superb $150 Grand. ^ ^ ^ 




THE STATE, WAR AND NAVY DEPARTMENT 



^ The" verdict of~the~world 



4^ 

4^ 
4^ 

49 
49 



sustains the claim that OUR MANUFACTURE of TYPEWRITER RIBBONS aurt CARBON PAPERS i^ 
]ust a little BETTER than THE BEST. This is the True award of Merit. We submit our line at all tim ' 
with great prule and pleasure. 

M. :si. Yellow box 

Typewriter 

HIBBOlSrS 

OLDEST STANDARD 

49^ 

Typewriter 
RIBBONS 

FINEST !>>' 'i-'if - WOIU A ) 







I ^KOO HESS 
AX. M. 
EXJREIvA 
COMP»ETITOB 
G^EEI >N IPBEB 
STLIv SBl >^ 
FI^E GBj^DES 
TYEEAVRITER 
Carbon Papers 



Our goods are used by all Government Departments with utmost satisfaction 

LONDON, 4 Queen Street 
PARIS, 37 Rue Vivienne 



MITTAG & VOLGER, 



NEW YORK CITY, 

828 Park Row BuiUing 
CHICAGO, 

108 La saue Street SoIe Manufacturers, PARK RIDGE, N. J., U. S, A. cologne, 22 FnesenpUtz 



4^ ^- : — ! 5* 




Hotel FRITZ REUTER 

UP TO-DATE EUROPEAN 

R^estSLVirant i^ 
R-e^thskellar 

Newly renovated s^ Eighty elegantly furnished 
rooms — forty with bath — telephone in every room 
Electric elevator s^ " San Souci/' the most inter- 
esting spot in Washington s^ !^ s^ s^ 

Uahle d'hote, 50c 

— equal to any dollar table d'hote in America 



Not to visit " Fritz Reuter's " famous place is to miss one of the great points of interest in the 
National Capital ^ Its unique register contains the names, sketches, poems and toasts cf some 
of the most noted public people of both hemispheres s^ sT s^ s^ s^ s^ s^ 

1 block fron^Pcnna. Depot f^ c^tlVt h St. tSl TetinCl. A^C. ^ blocks iron, the CapitoKr 



4 blocks from B. & O. D.pot 



10 minutes to all Boat L-ncs !:: 



• U»'* 



PAUL JONES WHISKIES 

J^ ^yire Gtiaranteed Ten y^ear^ Old ^ 





Paul Jones Whiskies possess that delightful fla.vor 
that age and purity can alone impart. Nothing finer 
has ever been put on the n\a.rket a.t any price ^ ^ 

The whiskies of the connoisseur— the whiskies for 
those who ca.n detect o.nd appreciate the fine quali- 
ties of fine whiskey v^v^v^s^s^v^v^v^sc 

The purity °f Pa.\il Jones Whiskies makes them inval\ia.ble for 
medicinaLl uses, and in the case °f convalescents where the rich 
ripeness °f a p\ire stimulant means the recovery °f heahh v V* 

SOLD AT THE BEST CAFES, HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS 
v V. ALL OVER THE UNITED STATES v. v. 





PAUL JONES & COMPANY 

LO\/ 1 ^V I LLE, K_EJV T\/C KJ^ 



B 





DMAN 



PIANO 



VALUE IN A PIANO 



is hard to get, because the printed claims of all 
manufacturers, good, bad or indifferent, are about 
the same. Twenty makes of pianos besides the 
Hardman, look and sound to the uninitiated 
much like it, but none of these makes— excellent 
though some may be in special points — equ£.I it in 
giving to the buyer greatest value in all 
points. sC There is but one "Hardman." 
Moderate prices. 



Hardman, Peck & Co., Mfrs. 



Washington Representative: 

A. V. GRIMES, 913 Penaac, Avenve 



FIFTH AVENUE AND 
NINETEENTH STREET 



New York. 




r=»==^:?=^ 



614 students last year 



OOD'S QOyHAiERCTiqU QOLLEGE 




311 Ka^t Capitol Street 

te/A.SHIJVGTOJV, 2). C, 



A High-Grade Business School, well conducted and 
well patronized ¥f Business, Shorthand, Typewriting, 
Civil Service sC Unusual facilities for securing positions 
for pupils — 

COURT F. WOOD, LL. M., 

"Presf'dent 



TELEPHONE, EAST 38 



iVrV/Vorj- altejay^ tefelcome] 
Ca.ll a.nd see us ; 



Catalogue for the asking 



TnatJSlJt'al Fff^works Sntfact 



WON ON ITS r.IERITS! 



NOTE — After a competitive test with all the leading Fireworks con- 
cerns in the country, we were duly awarded the contract by an experienced 
committee of citizens s^ See Fireworks program on another page s^ s^ 



f^oyd^iri^^Y - Chsi'Ttori Fri'^V/oi'Its Q- 



Manufactarerj of 



Fireworks^ 



77 ciisf*pi=e''S $tfeet* 



^^^v/ Voi'i^ 




Balloons, Flags, La-rvterrvs, Etc. 

FIRE-CRACKERS 



.Makk 



YaLi\g Key ^ Wah Shing Tong 

CANNON -CRACKERS 



Inatigtircittons and the City of Wa^hingion, 



EMONSTRATIONS of popular interest enrich the rather bare official ceremonial 
which marks the induction into office of a President of the United States. 

It is natural that this should be so. The culmination of the quadrennial 
contest is reached when the election returns are in, and then party bitterness gradu- 
ally disappears. "While the members of the dominant part\- are apt to look upon 
the ceremonies attending the inauguration of a President as a celebration also of the 
triumph of their party, still after all the main note in the pageantr)' of the day is 
National. It is true that a large number of the organizations of citizens taking part 
in the parade are political clubs, wearing the badge of the party victorious in 
the last preceding election. Marching in ihe same line, however, are men who 
\'oted for the defeated candidate. The cheering crowds through which the procession sweeps on its way 
up the broad expanse of Pennsylvania Avenne are not mere partisans but American citizens, rejoicing in 
the elevation to the chief place in the nation of one of their number. 

'^his fact, so significant of the character of the American people and the stability of their political insti- 
tutions, is not overlooked in the elaborate preparations. It is not a Governmental function. The Constitution 
provides that the President and Vice-President elect shall take the oath of office as a condition precedent to 
their entering upon the duties of these offices. All the ceremonial that now surrounds what is an extremely 
simple act is ilie growth of custom and usage without the sanction of law. 





THE CAPITOL 



The custom is time honored, however, for at the very beginning-, when the oath of office was adminis- 
tered to the first President, a procession was formed as an escort to the chief figure of the day, and at night New 
York City was brilliantly illuminated. Only varying in the number of organizations in the procession and in 
the size of the throngs that gather to witness the event, modern inaugurations are similar to those held in the 
early days of the Government. The elaborate spectacle accompanying the change in the first place in the Gov- 
ernment is not a charge on the nation's purse. No public money is expended, except the United States' 
share of the additional municipal expense for extra police, for street cleaning, and for other similar pur 
poses, which on this occasion amounts to five thousand dollars, 
the preparation and the management fall upon the Government 
provide the necessarv money. . 

For this patriotic .service the ^^.-^^Vj^-^^c-^C. 

for the past one hundred years to the 

fourth day of March, 1801, w' h e n > ^- -v^^^/(,(^ ^ 
take office in this city, stepped from ^f^Pj'/f^-O^J^^'?^^ 

fel" 
i 



Nor does the burden of the details of 
Private citizens do all the work and 



before which the "Alexandria company /v\' >'| 
paraded, and, attended by citizens, /\\^\ 
to the centennial anniversary of that ^)p_Jj 
arrano-ed for and provided all the pomp 



American people have been indebted 
citizens of Washington. Since the 
Thomas Jeflfer.son, the first President to 
his lodging place in New Jersey avenue, 
of riflemen and a company of artillery " 
walked to the Capitol building, down 
event, the citizens of Washington have 
and circumstance that has marked these 



occasions. 

It is easily within the memory of even those who have hardly reached middle life to recall the 
time when the eventful Fourth of ]\Iarch did not bring to the Nation's Capital the throngs of spec- 
tators of modern days. A procession of fifteen or twenty thousand men, representing civic organiza 



tions from all parts of the country, as well as State militia and United States troops, is an 
astonishing exaggeration in size of inaugural events of former days. To make proper provision for 
such an elaborate function as an inauguration has become, requires executive ability of a high order, 
and this is found developed to a marked degree in the citizens of Washington. They have had 
experience, for one thing, because the city by the Potomac is a favored meeting place for the people 
of the United States in their associations and conventions, and the spirit of hospitality, which aims to 
make visitors comfortable as well as welcome, has had as much influence, perhaps, in this particular 
as the attractions of the Nation's Capital, the mo.st beautiful city in tlie world. As tlie result of the 
time and attention given freely and unselfishly by public-spirited men, the city is decked in gala 
attire, with a brilliant scheme of illuminations at night; the orderly arrangement is secured of hundreds 
of organizations in a procession that fills the eye with its glitter and show ; and then at night, the 
culminating event of a great ball, where literally thousands of people meet amid surroundings of such 
beauty and artistic skill as ever to remain a memory of delight. 

A striking feature of the management of a modern inauguration is the 
attention given to what might be looked upon as details of trifling insignifi- 
cance. However, if this was not done, the same fate that befell some of 
those who were in New York city in the spring of 1789 might overtake 
the spectator at a modern inauguration, and he would be shelterless at night. 
This could easily be possible in any city at such a time, not that all the 
space in houses available for such purposes is occupied, but because strangers 
would not know wdiere to go, and those having accommodations would 
have no means of finding people in need of rooms. Now one of the larger of 
the sub-committees makes itself a medium between these two classes. This 




:4 ''iH^' I' ''' 



is done with so mucli system and accuracy that not only organizations are made at home in a strange 
city, but individuals are personally directed to places where they may find food and lodging. 

One of the marvels of modern co-operation is the results achieved by an Inaugural Committee^ 
a body of citizens associated, from a public spirit, to render the occasion of the visit to this city of 
so many thousands of people, pleasant and profitable. At the head is placed an eminent citizen, 
who, in the case of the present Inauguration, is 'Sir. John Joy Edson. The chairman is selected by 
the chairniau of the National Committee of the dominant political party and serves, as indeed all of 
his associates do, without compensation. He appoints the members of an E.Kecutive Conimittee, and 
designates from their number those who are to preside over the various sub-committees. Leading and 
representative men in all departments of a city's life serve on this committee willingly, and give 
ungrudgingly of their time and labor to the exacting work. Thev call for assistance upon their fellow 
citizens, and in this way the sub-committees are formed. A body of men is thus brought together 
the money value of whose service on the basis of the prevailing market rates would be a drain upon 
the resources of the National Treasury. As a result of their combined and patriotic efforts, arrange- 
ments are made which ensures a splendid spectacle, or rather series of spectacles, on the Fourth of 
March, and enables people assembled from all parts of the country to participate without the discom- 
fort and the manv annoyances which usually marks every occasion of the coming together of a great 
crowd. 

So admirable is the organization, that few people realize the elaborateness of the machinery which 
underlies it all. Genius has been described to be the faculty of taking pains, and these splendid results, satis- 
fying to the eye and gratifying to the pride of American citizens, comes as the reward of hard work. The 
community which this body of a couple of thousand citizens represents on such occasions has developed 
that species of civic pride which finds expression in deeds. 



^kSS>^^ 




THE U. S. TREASURY 



While Washington is the Capital City of the United States, it is also a comninnity of people with 
the interests, the aims, and the aspirations of all people of intelligence in their civic capacity. With a 
population that, according to the last census, numbered about 300,000, the city of Washington, which is 
now coterminous with the District of Columbia, and has an area of about 69 square miles, presents the 
anomaly, in this country at least, of a municipal government without provision for the direct expression of 
the will of the people. The Constitution gives Congress the power of "exclusive legislation" over the 
District of Columbia, as it also does over all places purchased " for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, 
dock ^'ards, and other needful buildings." 

There is, however, this important distinction that unlike the District, the latter places are not the centers 
of population. The District not being a State has no Representative in the National Legislature, and it is 
not even a State in embryo, as is the case with the Territories. The citizens have, therefore, no participa- 
tion in Federal elections, and since the year iSor, when Congress assumed the power over the District 
which the Constitution conferred upon it, that body has been the supreme law-making power. At one 
time Congress, to a certain extent, delegated its power by the creation of a local municipal government 
for the city of Washington, and permitting the existing municipalities of Alexandria and Georgetown to 
continue to exercise the powers derived from the legislatures of Mar\land and Virginia through laws enacted 
prior to the year 1801. Then, by act of the supreme law-making power, these forms of local government 
were swept out of existence, and in their stead a Territorial Government set up. Again Congress interposed, 
aboli.shed the Government by Territory and substituted that by Commission. The latter is the present form 
of government, which has been in existence for more than a quarter of a century. 

What was especialh- notable in this latter change was the abolition of all elective public officers, 
and, of course, of all opportunit\- for the exercise of suffrage by citizens of the District, and the 
assuming by Congress again in full, after the lapse of nearly three-quarters of a century, of its Consti- 




( 



THE WHITE HOUSE 




tutional right to the exercise of "exclusive legislation." The form of gov- 
ernment established consists of a Board of three Commissioners, one of whom 
must be an Engineer Officer of the United States Army. Receiving their 
appointment from the hands of the President, and being confirmed by the 
Senate; the Commissioners administer the laws which emanate from Congress, 
the exclusive source of legislation for the District. They have also quasi 
legislative functions in the authority to make building and police regulations. 
To the mind of the average American citizen, no doubt, this sort 
of municipal government suggests an absolutism, and while the will of the 
people apparently has no way of being expressed, yet after all popular sen- 
timent in Washington is heeded and followed by the local rulers mere than is the case in large cities 
where manhood sufi"rage e.xists. There is no limitation upon the President's field of selection other 
than that the civil Commissioners must be residents of the District, and the Engineer Commissioner 
must be of a certain rank. At the same, time the Chief Executive endeavors to ascertain what are 
the wishes of the community, and there is the further security against the peril of an injudicious appoint- 
ment in the United States Senate, where the fitness of a nominee can be thoroughly examined. 

One of the distinguishing characteristics of this form of government is the high character and 
standing of the men who hold and have held this office. The Commissioners having been appointed, 
do not become, as might be inferred theoretically, indifferent to the wishes of the people and blind to 
their interests ; neither, on the other hand, are the citizens without means of making themselves heard. 
In every section of the District, corresponding in some measure at least to the city ward, are found 
voluntary associations of citizens organized for the purpose of considering the municipal needs of their 
particular sections. The result of the action of these bodies, their views, and conclusions are brought 



to the attention of the District Commissioners, and when the need arises these associations also enlighten 
Congress through the medium of the District Committees. Then there is a general association known 
as the Board of Trade, which comprises in its membership representatives from the various sections 
of the District, thus constituting what might be termed a central body. There is also a Business 
Men's A.ssociation, so that it will appear that while the citizens of the District have not the privi- 
lege of being heard through the ballot, they are not thereby rendered dumb. 

Congress holds the purse strings of the District. All provision for municipal needs is made through 
an appropriation bill which now carries an expenditure of about eight millions of dollars annuall}'. Half 
of this amount is paid by the United States and the other half from money raised by taxation of the citizens 
of the Di.strict. All expenditures for local purposes must pass the scrutinj' of the officials of the Treasury 
Department, just as is done in the case of public money. 

In administration, the District government has proved to be economical as well as a capable medium of 
doing the public business with the minimum of annoyance and injustice to citizens. The money raised by 
taxation from the citizens of the District of Columbia is spent literally dollar for dollar in the public service — an 
anomaly in city government wdricli is readily recognized by those who are familiar with the considerable 
percentage of a cit\'s taxpayer's moi:e\- that goes in some other direction than that of the legitimate needs of 
the communit)-. The influence of the ward heeler and petty politician in Washington, to continue the 
anomalous picture, is not greater than that of men and women who contribute to the public revenues, are 
interested in the method of its expenditure, and whose opinions are therefore entitled to at least a hearing. 
To such a degree are the classes that run the government of the average American city so completely in the 
background in local affairs in Washington, that some people are not aware even of their existence. Taxes are 
uniform, not subject to violent fluctuations, and are applied with a degree of impartiality that contributes 
materialh' to the feeling of security so essential for promoting the investment of money. As has been aptly 



said, the Congress of" the United States constitutes the board ot aldermen and common council Air the Nation's 
Capital. 

It is no doubt largely owing to the fact that the money needed for the slightest movement of 
local machinery must be voted bv Congress, that the impression is somewhat prevalent that citizens of 
Washington enjoy freedom from local taxation, and that the General Government iiaternally lights the 
streets, provides a police force, and supplies other needs of a modern city. While such an erroneous 
notion of how Washington is governed may be the result of a merely superficial knowledge, still it is 
not surprising in view of the city's unique place among American municipalities, not alone due to its 
form of government, but to the results in that it is the medium of the wise and economical admin- 
istration of the affairs of a large community. 

Washington is fortunate among all cities, especially in this country, in that the original plan of 
streets and avenues -w^as laid out on broad, generous lines, with an artist's preception of effective vistas 
and groupings, that now constitutes the city's chief claim to admiration for its beauty and attractive- 
ness. Happily this plan has been in tlie main adhered to, so that the first map of the city printed 
in the year 1792 can be distinguished from a modern map only by a rather careful .study. vSuch has 
been the urban growth during the past quarter of a century, that another and greater Washington has 
sprung up, almost, it would seem, as if by magic, and a territory nearly equal to that which .seemed 
for years an extravagant provision for the city is now gridironed and traversed with the streets and 
avenues of L'Enfant's plan, extended far beyond what was fixed upon more than one hundred years 
ao'o as the bounds of the citv. 



At tlie same time, this has not been a process of the mere spreading out of a strag- 
>;liiig village. It has been rather the steady but triumphant progress of a growing, thriv- 
ing communit)-. While the original plan made ample and admirable pro- 
vision for parks, the modern designers of greater Washington have not lost 
sight of the value to an urban community of what has been termed the 
lungs of a city. In addition to the circles and spaces that mark the plan 
of tlie newer portion of the citv, some two thousand acres bordering on 
each side of picturesque Rock Creek have forever been set apart as a place 
of recreation and rest lor the public. Instead of the disease-breeding Potomac 
flats, a reclaimed area ot park land, comprising some seven hundred acres, now borders the deepened 
channel of the ri\-er, and is practically an extension of the ]\Ia]l, that splendid reserve of wood and 
lawn that lies right in the heart of the great cit^•. 




Washington is firsc of all a resident cit^■, conceded to be the most delightlul in the world, 
where can be enjo\"ed the ad\-antages of a refined, culti\ated, cosmopolitan society, where men and 
women whose names are of note in scientific and literary circles make their homes, and where edu- 
cational ad\-antages of the best type and variet\" are to bs had. It is not surprising that people of 
wealth come to W'asbiugton and erect spacious and elegant homes. It is not remarkable when one 
thinks of Washington as the seat of government, as the official home of all the Presidents except one, 
and of the historic and splendid public edifices located there, tliat people from all parts of the country 
should make frequent pilgrimages thither, so that now Washington stands third in the list of great 
centers of railroad passenger traffic. 



Washington is also the center of commercial life and activit)', as is evident from the appearance 
of the business sections, where the sky line of the street is broken and jagged by the tall buildings 
characteristic of the modern city. 

Great mercantile establishments, as well as a multitude of shops carrying general and special lines, 
provide for the needs of the three hundred thousand people in the District, and also of those living in that 
territorv, with constantly lengthening radii spreading out through Maryland and Virginia, of which the city is 
commerciallv the heart. Some of the finest buildings in the country in use by banks and other financial 
institutions are the homes of concerns whose business is confined to Washing- 
ton. In many cases the structures have been built for, and are used exclu- 
sively for the business of, the company occupying it. These great corpora- 
tions, commanding large capital, furnish by their very existence and pros- 
peritv conclusive evidence of the resources commerciall\- of Washington. 
Buildings designed and erected for hotel purposes are increasing in number 
not alone, but in proportions. The same tendency is observed in the struc- 
tures built for apartment houses, for office purposes, and for other commer- 
cial uses. In spite of the fact that there is abundance of room for Washington 
to spread out, yet, as in all great cities, there is a disposition to centralize not 
For this reason the modern building, while covering an area of ground that 
would be a marvel to the builders of earlier years, also soars to a height that was never before possible 
until the present era of steel construction. 

There is, in conjunction with this process of concentration, also very markedly in evidence in the 
Washington of to-day, a movement away from the thickly populated districts. People wish to rear their 
families and spend their hours of rest as far as possible from the din and turmoil of daily life, and so 




only business, but homes. 



the outposts of the city's thousands are constantly niovuig, and being advanced farther and farther out. Tlie 
end is by no means in sight. 

The best modern facilities in the way of electric street-car lines now furnish rapid and easy commu- 
nication not merely within urban limits, but between the crowded sections and the onth'ing regions. 
People of moderate means are thus enabled to have a wide range of choice in selecting their homes, and in 
consequence the class of home-owners, already a large percentage of the entire population as compared with 
American cities, is a constantly increasing one. While the teudenc>- of the people of large means to establish 
their homes in Washington attracts much notice, but little attention is paid to those, by no means wealth\-, 
who find Washington a place where they can live within limited incomes, and at the same time enjov the 
advantages found in such a center as the Capital City of the United States has become. 

To this class, which is more numerous than is generally supposed, the excellence of the public school 
system is a vital point in considering the benefits of a residence in Washington. 

In many cities these publicly supported schools, for one reason or another, do not rank very high, and 
in consequence children coming from homes of refinement, and wdiose parents are solicitous to secure for them 
the best advantages, are not found enrolled in them. In Washington that is not the case, as all classes 
of the community are patrons of the public schools, and parents are relieved of the burden of paying twice 
for the education of their children, and at the same time have the satisfaction of knowing their little ones are 
receiving the benefits that come from good schools. 

During the past two decades, according to the official results of the census, one hundred thousand 
has been added to the figures of the total population. The opportunities that are always to be found 
in a growing city, of which many examples could be cited from the history of the development of 
the West, are available to-day in Washington. For example, it is conceded that the manufacturing 
interests of the city are still largely undeveloped, as the great bulk of the supplies needed by a 



population that is estimated to be at least 550,000, including that of the city and the outlying but tributary 
territory, is furnished by manufacturers located elsewhere. With the advantages of cheap land near the 
city, and also a likelihood in the near future of the force of the Potomac River being utilized to furnish 
electric power, it is apparent that enterprises will multiply for the purpose of supplying the splendid 
local market. The public spirit and energy of the people of Washington, that has contributed to its 
wonderful onward progress and development, has survived the discouragements and hindrances con- 
tinuing through nearly three-quarters of a century, and arising from the unwillingness of the General 
Government to assume its obligations as the owner of more than one-half of the land within the old 
limits of the cit)-, and through all these year.> a resident population kept alive the traditions of a past 
which are associated with the names of many men who, while enjoying a wide reputation, yet were 
first and foremost citizens of Washington, and proud of the cit\- of their choice. 

Washington, as the Capital of the Nation, is known far and wide. As a community of people 
intelligent, industrious, and enterprising it is not so well known. Whether one wishes to study 
Washington as a unique problem in municipal government or as a city that is a.ssnming, with unchecked 
energy, the proportions of a giant among large aggregations of population, the material is rich and 
abundant. In whatever phase one regards it, whether as the political capital of the greatest nation 
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Phone * 
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Washington 
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Proprietor 




Urainard H. Warnkr, 
Blarslial of Civic Division 



Geueral Francis V. Greene, 
Grand Marshal 



John Joy Edson, 
Chairman Inaugural Committee 



The Inaugviracl Committees. 

EjcectitixJe. 

John Joy Edsd.v, Chairniau. T. E. Roessle. Vice Chairman. George Truesdell, 3d Vice Chainuau 

E. Southard Parker, Treasurer. Harrison Dingman, Secretary. 

Charles J. Bell Thomas W. Cridler Justice J. M. Harlan J. R. Marshall Isadore Saks 



James E. Bell Henry E. Davis 

James G. Berret Admiral Dewey 
(ieii. H. V. Boyuton John Devine 



John B. Wight 
Beriah Wilkins 
A. A. Wilson 
Louis D. Wine 



.A, . B. Browne 
George W. Cook 
John F. Cook 
John B. Cotton 
Wm. V. Cox 



W. W. Dudley 
John W. Foster 
George (Tibsoii 
C. C. Glov-er 
G- H. Hamilton 



Gen. G. H. Harries General Miles Gen. Ellis Spear 

StilsDu Hutchins C. F. Norment E. J. Stellwageu 

Dr. Ralph Jenkins James L. Norris Richard Sylvester 

S. H. Kauttnuinn Theodore W. Noyes John W. Thompson Simon Wolf 

William S. Knox Myron M. Parker Thomas F. Walsh S. W. Woodward 

John B. Larner William H. Rapley B. H. Warner A. S. Worthingtou 

H. B. F. McFarUind Cuno H. Rudolpli M. I. Weller H. A. Willar<l 



C. J. Bei.i., Chairman. 



Finance. 

Ward TuciKhn, Yic-r rUaii-ii 



W. A. Meauxs, Treasurer. 



P^^ecepiton. 

Lieut. General Kelson A. Mile.^^, U. S. A., Chairman 
Charles C. Glover, Vice-Cliairman Col. Francis Michler, Secretary 

Decoration of "Ball P^oom. 

John RfSH Marshall, Chairman. James G. Hill, Vice Chairman. 



Fuederick B. Pyle, Secretary. 



Transportation. 

Colin Studds, Vice Chairman. 



'H. R. HowsER, Secretary. 



Clareni'e F. Norment, Chairman. 

ParKs and F^e-vietufin^ Stands. 

John B. Larnki;, Chairman 
Sami-el W. Cl'RRIden, 1st Vice Chairman Henky P. Blair, 2.1 Vice Chairman John Joy Edson, Jr., Secretary 




MEMBEUS OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 

James (i. Berret Geo. H. Hamilton Jas. L. Norris \V. V. Cox 

W. W. Dudley John W. Thompson A. B. Browne E.S.Parker 

Harrison Uiugman Geo. W. Cook A. S. Worthington Jas. R. Marshall 



General Miles 
John B. Wight 
John W. Foster 



Clarence F. Norment John T. Devine 
John F.Cook Stilson Hutchins 

W. S. Knox T. W. Cridler 



Dr. Ralph Jenkin: 
L.juis 1>. Wine 
A. .\. Wilson 



THE INAUGURAL CONCERTS. 

The plau of concerts following the luangnral Ball of 1897 met 
with such favor atid were such a source of eujoymeut to the thoa- 
sauds of visitors iu the city that the Inaugural Mrisic Committee, 
of which Mr. William Harrymau Rapley is chairman, this year 
determined to adopt the scheme iu its entirety. 

Five dedicatory concerts will be given, three on Tuesday, March 
5, and two on Weduesday. March 6. The concerts will all be held 
in the Pension Office Building, giving those who attend an oppor- 
tunity of witnessing the gorgeous b:tll-room decorations, on which 
the sum of |18,ou0 has been spent. The concerts will f lu-ther prove 
a delightful musical treat. They w-ill be rendered by the United 
States M;iriue Band, the national musical organization, directed by 
Lieut. William H. Sautelmann, and have been arranged on the 
following plan : 

Tuesday, March 5, 10.30 .\. m.— Concert in honor of the United 
States Army. 

Tuesday, March 5, at 2 p. m. — Concert in honor of the United 
States Navy. , 

Tuesd.iy, March 6, at 8 p. m. — Concert in honor of the Congress 
of the United S:ates. 

Weduesday, March 6, at 2 p. m. — Concert in honor of the States 
of the Uniou. 

Wednesday, March 6, at 8 p. m. — Concert in honor of the people 
of the Ujii;ed States. 

At the last concert, the evening of Mai'ch 6, a grand chorus of 
more than 500 voices, under the direction of Percy S. Foster, will 
be an added feature. The Marine Band will render solo numbers 
and acciimpanimenis, and as the program below indicates, the con- 
cert will be OAB of rare interest. 

The admission to each concert will be 50 cents, the tickets being 
on sale at prominent stores about town and at the Pen.sion Building 
the days of the concerts. The tickets will be general in character, 
being valid for any one of the concerts. 

^nxiigiifiil (Gx'uxd OTcincct't 

IN HONOR OF THE UNITED STATES ARMY 

Represented by Lieutenant-General NtLSON A. MlLtS and Staff 

Tuesday Morning, 10.30, March 5, l^^OJ 

UNITED sTATi-S MARINE BAND 

WM. H. SANTELMANN. Director 
And the FAMOUS REPUBLICAN GLEE CLUB of Columbus, Ohio 



PROGRAMME 

Overture— "The Merry Wives of Windsor" Nicolal 

. (a) "Mexican ."erenafle Leila" Chambers 

(6) Marcli—" Hail to the Spirit of Liberty" Sousa 

Tlie Chapel Kreutzer 

Republican Glee Club 

Waltz— "Vienna Blood" Strauss 

, Solo for Cornet— Fantasia, "Un Perle d' Ocean " Hoch 

Musician, Otto Lehnekt. 

. The Happy Wanderer Zollner 

Kepublican Glee Club. 

, March— "Lieut.-Gen. Nelson A Miles" Wight 

, Music de Ballet. "Coppelia" Delibes 

, Kxcerpts from "A Runaway Girl" Caryll 

Stand by the Flag .^rr. W. H. Lott 

March—'- General Heywood's " Santelmann 

Kepublican Glee Club. 
-National Song, " America." 

Jlnaixnitvat Oivancl ffianccft 

IN HONOR OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY 

Represented by Admiral GEOpoh DtWhV and Staff 

Tuesday Afternoon, at 2.00, March 5, 1901 

UNITED STATES MARINE BAND 

WM. H. SANTELMANN, D, rector 
PROGRAMME 

March— "Hands Across the Sea" Sousa 

. Overttire— "Calm Sea and a Happy Voyage" Mendelssohn 

, Excerpts from the Suite, "Bal Costume." 

ml Polish "Polonaise et Polonaise. > R,ihi,-,<.t„i„ 

(6) Spanish "Toreador etAndalouse 5 uumnsiein 

(o) Cuban Dance, "Trocha" Tyers 

(h) Gridiron March Rakemann 

, Melodies from "FoxyQuiller I>e Koven 

March— "The National Capital Centennial" Santelmann 

Grand Fantasia, " Lohengrin " Wagner 

, Clarinet Solo—" 9th Fantasia " Brespant 

Mr. Jacques Vanpoucke. 

, Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 Liszt 

, Patriotic Hymn, "Hail Columbia" Fylea 




MEMBERS OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. 

S. H. Kauffmann M. C. Weller Gen. BoyDton CunoH. Rudolph Admiral Dewey John B. Larner 

James E. Bell Justice Harlan H. A. Willard E. J.Stellwagen Myron M. Parker C.J.Bell 

Utuige Gibson MaJ. Sylvester Beriah Wilbins Theo, M', ^■oye5 Simon Wolf Henry E, Pavis 



H. B. F. Macfarlandl Gen. G. H. Ha 
Gen. Ellis Spear T. E. Roessle 

Xsadore Safes S- W, WQoriwa 




Dr. Peroy Hlckling E. A. Oldham A. T. King 

A. F. OfTiitt M. J. P'alvey George VV. Driver 

W. W, Porter A. D. Whittington P. J, Nee 




Herrvos Holleben, 



S;TS*p'SS..*-d :;;;;o»i-,-»frc....,E.»... 



?:=,.:'■• -'■• ;?=-i;^"' ™»..is>s;;ss;s„ 



roiutc Cassisi. lUissia 
Mr. J. N. Legkh, Haiti 




Mr. Wu Ting-fang, China Senor UonJ B. Calvo, Costa Rica Count G. de Lichtervelde, Belgium Senor Don L. F. Cokea, Nicaragua Duke de Aecos, Spain 
Baron W. A. F. Gevers, Netherlands KoGOEO Takahika, Japan Senor D. F. E. Guachalla, Bolivia Senor D. F. L. Vasquez, Doni. Kepublic 




Joseph Pan-is T. A.T. Judd Col. J. R. Ruuzer 

Geo. B. Welch Percy S. Foster J.T.Bradford 

Howard S, Nyman S. J, PrescoU Leonard Sargent 



Wash. Topham Frank Lee Denny 

H. H. Bnrroughs Jno. Moran 
Benj, W. Guy Williams C. Fox 



Whitman O.sgood F. J. Heiberger,'Jr. ; Isaac Gans 
Michael Scanlon T. Conrad Dodge Frank T. Rawling 

A. C, Steinbrenner J, H, Doyle Louis Kerapner 



2;nauf)txval ffivand OTcrnccvt 

IN HONOR OF THE CONGRESS OF THE U. S. 

Represented by the Vice-President and Speaker of tlie House 

Tuesday Evening:, at 8.00, March 5, 1901 

UNITED STATES MARINE BAND 

WM. H. SANTELMANN, Director 
And the FAMOUS REPUBLICAN GLEE CLUB of Columbus, Ohio 

PROGRAMME 

1. Overture— "William Tell" Rossini 

2. Suite— " Scenes Pittoresque" Massenet 

(a) March. (6) Air tie Ballot. (t-i Fete lioheiuo. 

3. The Artillerist's Oath (_• F.Adam 

Republican Glee Club. 

4. Waltz— "The Debutante" Santelmann 

5. Saxophone Solo— "Fantasia Carnival de Venice" Dessormes 

Mr. Jean B. H, Moereniaiis. 

6. March— "The Man Behind the Gun" Sousa 

7. Hark, the Merry Drum Krugh 

Republican Glee Club. 

8. Grand Fantasia, "The Valkyre " . ... Wagner 

9. Slavonic Dance, "No 1" Dvorak 

10. (a) Characteristic— "The Coon Band Contest" Pryor 

lb) March— "Frangesa" Costa 

11. («) Caiupaign Song— "The Three Bills" .J. A. I'arks 

(6) Star-.Spangled Banner Arr. \\". H. Lott 

Republican Glee Club. 

12. Jolly Fellows' Waltz 

13. Patriotic Fantasia, "Tlie Voice of Our Nation" Santelmann 



InaxtflWfal eSvand ©onccx-t 

IN HONOR OF THE STATES of the AMERICAN UNION 

Represented by the Governors Thereof, ,iccomp.inied by their Staffs 

Wednesday Afternoon, at 2.00, March 6, 1901 

UNITED STATES MARINE BAND 

W.Vl. H. SANTELMANN, Director 

PROGRAMME 

1. March— "The Stars and Stripes Forever" Sousa 

2. Overture— "King Henry VIII," Hatton 



!. "Angelus," from Suite, "Scenes Pittoresque" Massenet 

I. Waltz— "The Volunteers " .Santelmann 

). Selection— "The F'ortune Teller" Herbert 

j. Ballet Music " Naila" Delibes 

f. (a) Spring Song" Meudelssolin 

(6) March— ".Admiral Dewey" Santelmann 

i. Flugeihoru Solo— "Quant' iot'Arao" Satta 

Mr. Walter F. Smitli. 

I Fantasia, " Carmen " Bizet 

I. National Song, " My Country, 'Tis of Thee." 

luawmivuX (Clxoval ffonccvt 

IN HONOR OF THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES 

Represented by the President and his Cabinet 

Wednesday Night, March 6, 1901, at 8 o'clock 

INAUGURAL CHORUS OF 500 VOICES 

Mr. PERCY S. FOSTER, Musical Director, with the assistance of the 
UNITED STATES MARINE BAND, WM. H. S.ANTEHtANN, Director 

PROGRAMME 

. (a) America .^mith 

(&) American National H.vmn Kellar 

Inaugural Chorus. 

. Overture— "Tannhauser" Wagner 

Marine Band. 

. (a) Hard Times, Come No More S.C. Foster 

(6) To Thee, O Country Eichberg 

Inaugural Chorus. 

Minuet Paderewski 

Marine Band. 

. Freedom, Our Queen (Coiuposed for this occasion.) . . . F. IS. Burton 

Inaugural Chorus. 

. PiccoloSolo-" The Nightingale" .lulien 

Mr. G. De Ijuca. 

, Unfold, Ye Portals, "Redemption" Gounod 

Inaugural Chorus. 

. Grand Fantasie, " H Trovatore " Verdi 

Marine Band. 

. (a) Song of the Flag De ICoven 

(6) " Recessional " De Koven 

Inaugural Chorus. 

. Slavonic Dance, No. 8 Dvorak 

Marine Bond. 

. New Hail Columbia, "Tobasco" Chadwick 

Inaugural Chorus. 
The Star Spangled Banner 

Inaugural Chorus and Marine Band. 



//> 

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CAPITAL, - 
SURPLUS, 
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$500,000 
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Thomas Hyde, Vice President 

James M. Johnston, 2d Vice President 
Arthur T. Brice, Cashier 

Wm. J. Flather, Ass't Cashier 



Letters o/ Credit, a^vailable in Domestic and Foreign Countries 
B^nk collections. Orders for Investments. Stocks e.nd Bonds 



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r\thii'g \oii need or want dune in Photography 




Branch Store: 4S9 Pa. Ax^C. At^ 

8@"Carrtc6.Souventrs of TOlasbfttflton 

DQN'T FQRSBT THBt^NnMBERS 




MODERN 



Sanitary Stables Carriagesand Equipages 

Special Turnouts for V«4dings,.Parties,lEt«. 



"^Ijc ^tJtumg ^ht 



BEytfi IftthS USI ••'" 



'IPLAIN nLKIOCjlDET|»"! 



ILK lOCADtT,'^'^"-*' "■ ° ^"-'|ij| 







/\NE of tlie finest examples 
'-' of modern office buildings 
to be found anywhere, is 
the magnificent structure 
erecied by the Evening Slar 
Newspaper Company, on the 
corner of Eleventh St. and 
Pennsylvania Avenue. It is 
conceded by many to be the 
most complete newspaper 
plant in the world. It con- 
tains every convenience 
known to modern science, 
and cost close to half a mil- 
lion dollars. 

Messrs. KaufFmann and 
Noyes are justly proud of 
their new home, and deserve 
the thanks of the community 
for so substantially and hand- 
somely enhancing the beauty 
of Washington's main thoroughfare. The building was designed by 
Marsh & Peter, Architects, of Washington, who also superintended 
its construction. This firm also designed the Union Trust Building, 
Wyatt Building, aud a number of other promiueut.buildings. 



mil 




1 fr ^ ' f ff 
? » ''''Iff 



i^ 



^eniis of Subscription 

The Daily, Sunday excepted, will be delivered by carriers to subscribers in 
Vashington and Alexandria at 15 cents per week, or 50 cents per month : the L)aily, 
including Sunday, at 20 cents per week, or 70 cents per month. 

36\) fIDail, postatjc prcpai^ 

Daily, Sunday excepted, one year $600 

Daily, Sunday included, one year 7 50 

I'aily, Sunday excepted, otic luontli 50 

Dailv, Sunday included, one monih 70 

m)t ^te trinity 



PUBLICATION OmCE 

THE HUTCHINS BTJILrHNQ 

PENNS'TLVANIA AVENtTE 

SUBSOKIPTION BY MAIL— ONE YEAR 

Morning,' Kvering, and Snnday $6 co 

Morning and Sunday 4(0 

Evening and Sunday 4 00 

Sunday Only 1 00 

MONTHLY 15Y CAKKIER 

Morning, Evening, and Sunday $ 50 

Morning and Sunday 35 

Evening and Sunday 35 




THE ROBINSONJ» 
VAPOR BATH ' 
CABINET 
From $5(0 $12 50 



ket, a 
I. Sun 



ippe 



Lumbago, etc Expert 
physicians in all chro- 
nic diseases in charge 
Consultations free to all who use the 
cabinet. Circulars free. Drop us postal 
and read about it before bu\'in^. 

THE ANDERSON _ 

VAPOR BATH CABINET CO. 
720 8th S«. N. W.. Washington, D. C. 



It is yet early in the year 

INAUGURATE anew system of 
conducting yourfinancial affairs. 
Condense your indebtedness by 
Borrowing Money through us to 
pay various creditors. We nego- 
tiate loans on Houskhold Fur- 
niture. Pianos, etc. All busi- 
ness strictly confidential. No 
expense unless loan is made. 

Evans & Co., TOT G St. N.W 

Room J. op. Patent Office, Wash'n. D C 



otox J.C.YOST 
Practical Builder 

—Thirty years* experience— 

715 NINTH ST. N. E. 

Easv and special terms and moderate 
prices to everybody. Estimates, plans 
and specifications furnished, and houses 
built in stwrtest time possible. Come 
and see me. 



We ship Wines everywhere 



Case 12 quarts 

Assorted 
TO-KALON Wines 

$4.8° 



The finest product of the famous 
California vineyards— wines in many 
cases superior to the imported— at half 
the price 

Call or write for catalogue 



To-Kalon 



WINE CO. 

614 Fourteenth Street 



>s HARVEY'S >v 

Acknowledsed to be the leading Re-lavirant of llie Vatijnal Capital, where 
have dined all the great men of ihe nation, was established in 1S5.S by the present 
pniltrielor. who since that time has devoted hisenrire time and atteniion to the 
building up of the establishment and he takes pride in tliefact that it has achieved 
a National Reputation as being the Leading Restaurant and Oyster House (or 
ladies and gentlemen in the country. 

Mr. Harvey is a natural epicure.'and his success is largely attributed to the fact 
of bis unerring judgment in the matier of selecting the fintst eatable."* and 
viands on the niaiket and in cooking and preparing them iu a tempting, healthlul 
and appetizing manner. 

He stand.s unrivalled in the preparation of the tliree most delicate dishes of 
the American Continent, Oy.sters. Diamond-Back Terrapin and Canvas-Back Pnck. 

Broiled Live Lobster and Sea-looa of every variety are served at this establish- 
ment, alwavs fresh, and in the selection of this ciass of goods Mr. Harvey gives 
his personal attention, 

Mr. Harvey is Ihe originator of the celehrated Steamed Oysters. 

GEORGE W. HARVEY 

Proprietor and Owner 

1016 Pennsylvania Ave., Cor. 11th St. 
Opposite New Post Office V V V V V" Washington. D. C 



Franklin S, Co. 



OPTICIANS 

Kodaks <5L Svipplies 
Souvervirs V ^ 



1203 F St. N.W. 



niS5 M. J. BOYD 

Hairdressing 
and Shampooing: 

Miss Boyd is an artist in this trade, as 
well as Face Steaming and Massageing. 
She has attained the art of taking wrin- 
kles out of the face, and will make the 
' OLD LOOK YOUNG" with her wonder- 
ful trssuf builder. Miss Boyd will he 
pleased to see her many friends at her 
parlors — 

9i4 G 5t. Northwest 



1 NATIONAL CAPITAL ! 
I BREWING COMPANY'S | 

" Diamond and 

I Muenchener" i 

=iiBEERS=: 

|E\'ERYWHEREj 

















'**- 








AJUl^lffl^ 




r( 








::=rfa^^^^^^ 




^m^ 






1 




I- 




^ 


^T SHH^^^^^^Ks 


-i3| 




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■-..- -.'A 









WK ARE THE EEADIXG 



Ipiano, ©roan anb riDusic 1F3ou9e 

AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL 

i^ea-j-onj- therefor : 

LARGEST STOCK 
BEST GOODS ^ 
LOWEST PRICES 
EASIEST TERMS 

SAIS^DERS & STAYMATS^ CO. 

Percy S. Foster ,^ ^ „ Rm 

.Mn,.r.\Vasl,. Wareroo.ns 1327 jf Stl'CCt !^X 



Baltimore Store 

liai-li-sStivrt 




TOMB OF WASHINGTON at Mt, Vernon on the Potomac 



ONYX" 

BLACKS 
HOSIERY 

" ONYX " brand is the standard 
for Black Hosiery, and is specially 
noted for 

SHAPE, ELASTICITY AND 
DURABILITY 



LorJ and Taylor. Wholesale Importers, guarantee 
pair sold. If you cannot obtain at vour 



LORD 5d TAYLOR 

Wholesale J» New York 




C. M. Eakle Chas. Schneider 

Wm. M. Hakpbr M. E. Olmsted 
Melville D. Lindsev Bobt. B. Cavekly 



H. Clay Brownij 
A. F. McMillan 
J. A. Egberts 



Walter B. Williams Elleky- J. Bukt 
Capt. W. H. Norton e. J.Hannan 
Percy H. Russell J. W. Langley- 



,J. M. FOED 
F. A. SWAUTWOUT 

Capt. J. J, Bain 



A,R. MT3LI.0WKY Col. Wm. Dkkh > 
Loois Goldsmith Gen. A. M. Legi. 
Henry D. Fry,M'.D. Dr. Geo. B. Welch 



Legtslattovk. Soxi-Ventrs and TtcKet^. 

Aldis B; Browne, Chairman. John B. Wight, Chairmau. 

"Press — Ej>cectzti'<Je. 

H. V. BoYNTON, Chainnan Frank A. Richardson and R. J. Wynne, Vice Chairmen. 

Medals and "Badges 

Ellis Spear, Chairman Marcus Baker, Vice Chairmau John Carmody, Secretary 

Auditing. 

E. J. Stellwagen, Chairman. James E. Fitch William S. Thompson 



Tub lie Comfort. jT 



M. I. Weller, Chairman Charles Moore, Vice Chairman James F. Hood, Secretary. 

Sub-Committee lor Colored Visitoivs. 

Daniel Murray, Chairman Dr. A. M. Curtis, Vice Chairman Edward E. Cooper, 2d Vice Chairmau. 

Ci-Vic Organizations 

B. H. Warner, Chairman George C. Lewis, Secretary 

William Fkye White, Myer Cohen, William P. Van Wickle, Vice Chairmen. 

Military Organization 

Gou. George H. Harries, Chairman Maj. R. D. Simms, Vice Chairman F. J. Whitehead, Secretary 

Carriages. 

William S. Knox, Chairman. Allison Nailor, Jr., Vice Chairman. Barry Bulkley, Secretary. 

Fire-^eOorK.^ 

CuNO H. Rudolph, Chairman. J. Fred. Kelley^ 1st Vice Chairman. A. E. Offutt, 2nd Vice Chairmau 

J. E. Jones, 8rd Vice Chairmau. John A. Koons, Secretary. 




Chas. Daniel John B. Ridkr C. J. James M. F. Finley, M. D. M. A. Wertz C. A. Langley E. C. Brown Wm. B. Severe 

David M. Hess Reginald de Koven Wm. G. Hemdekson Wm. F. Gudb Silas Boyoe B. B. Earnshaw J.B.Kendall A. H. G. Kichardsoi 

MaJ. C. T. YODKR Geo. MacDonald, m. d. Corry M. Stadden Wm. M. Meredith W. J. Vonderhkidb E. A. Cliffokd John C. S. Burokr F. P. McDERMniT 



lUtiTninatton 

George Gibson, Chairmau Frank H. Thomas, Vice Chairman Frank H. Sebring, Secretary 

Afreet Tyecorations 

Loris D. Wine, Cliainiian S. B. Hege, 1st Yiee Chairman 

W. Hajiilt(i\ Bayly, id Vice ( luiirnuin W. Clarence Duvall, od Yiee Chairmau 

Mtisic 

William H. Raplev, Chairman 
Franklin T. Howe, 1st Vice Chairman Frank P. Reeside, id Yice Cliairmau Howard Fisk, Seeretarj' 

Vrirfting. 

Isadore Saks, Chairman. George A. Lewis, Yiee Chairman. J. Whit Hekron, Secretary. 

"Banqtiet 

John- T. Devine. Chairman Thomas Tciavnsend KicLLi.r, \\i\' (_liaiin;an Usgar J. Rkketts, Secietaiy 

Public Order. 

Richard Sy'Lvester, Chairman 
CtEORcje W. R()Izep, 1st Yiee Chaiinian John E. Wilklns, id Yiee t liairiiian Kdwin B. Hesse, Peerefary. 

Corrvfort at "Ball 

Major James E. Bell, Cliairmau Alexander Grant, Yiee t hairnuin Captain C. Fred Ce)oK, Secretary, 

Floor and "Promenade Commtffee 

Ralph Jenkins, Chairman and Director. F. P. B. Sands, Yice-Chairman. 



^ 




Frank P. Weller 

K. Booth Bucklev 

VVm. K. Yoder 



E. H. Droop 

ADOI,pi.0S CUDE 

A. E, Offctt 



W'M. F. Hart 

1]-. O. M. KOBER 

f. H. Jejiisox 



A. E. L. Leckik 

Hen'RY XEale 

John' D. Car.mody 



J. H. Smalt,. Jr. 
A. S- T. Johnson 
John W. ^VATSo^- 



E. F Droop 

J P. JlECiKEW 

, .M. J. Gkiffith 



Lf.ona kd S. Cook 
C. H. Krexer 

(nl. I!. F. 11 \V K 



Col. C. p. TONCKAV 



i;oBT. \v. \\n.i.s 




Frank O. Parker C. B. Pe<arson 

Hiram Buckiughaui A. L. Reed 
Jos. P. Rudy J. A. Blundon 



Gen. E. W. Wliitaker 
C. F. Marshvll 
W. J. Frizzell 



r.. P. Darrell 
George Harding 
John.E. Wagner 



W. A. Hungerford 
Capt. O. C Lewis 
Wm. R, Smith 



M. G. Emery E. J. Cantwell 

A. W. Reynolds C. A. B-andenbur 

B. W. Clark D. K. '"itzhugh 



Dr. Florence Donohue 
Frank K. Raymond 
E. W. Byrn 




John B. Cotton 
J. B. Espey 
Wilton J. Lambert 



Ost-ai-l'. Schmidt 
Thos. V. Walsh 
O. W. W hite 



.lames Keenan John C- Pari 

s. Gassenheimer J. H. Moser 

Col. W. C. Haskell J. B. Bailey 



L. s Lipscomb 
A.T. Ciirran 
Thomas Blagden 



A. M. Hoarlley 

Andrew B. Graliam 

Louis E. Phillips 



E. Berliner 
Philip T.Hall 
A. L. Reed 



PROMINENT COLORED MEMBERS OF INAUGURAL COMMITTEES. 




Dr. Will. S. Lofton Jerome A. Johnson E. Mayfield Boylo Gov. F. R.S. PinchliaoU W. Calvin Ctiase D. B. McCary Dr. J. R. Fianpis 




L.O.Posey Ji iv .^. P.rown Dr. A. M. Curtis Ma,i. C. A. Flpotwood Capt. T. .S. Kelly \V. H. Broolts, D.I). Henry P. Slaiishi 



^ THE TRIP OF ALL TRIPS ^ 

VIA NORFOLK AND WASHINGTON STEAMBOAT CO. 

VISITORS attending- the 
Inaugural Ceremonies 
should not fail, during 
their sta}' in Washington, to 
take a trip down the beautiful 
Potomac River, so rich in his- 
torical interest. The elegant 
steamers Newport News, Nor- 
folk and Washington, to Old 
Point Comfort, Newport News 
and Norfolk, with the added 
opportunit}' of visiting Ocean 
View and Virginia Beach, leave 
Washington daily from the 
foot of Seventh Street at 6.30 
P. M., arriving at Old Point 
Comfort the next morning at 
6.45 and Norfolk at 8 o'clock. 

Returning steamers leave Norfolk daily at 6 P. M. and Old Point Comfort at 7 P. M., arriving in Washington 

the next morning at 7 o'clock. 

The trip in these superb steamers is unsurpassed at this season of thej'ear, and the route extends down 

the Potomac between the banks of historic Maryland and Virginia, famed in song and story. Passing through 

Chesapeake Bay and Hampton Roads, the passenger may view the scene of the famous conflict between the 

Merrimac and Monitor, and numerous other naval battles of the Civil War. 

The cuisine of the steamer is supplied with every delicac}- of the season. The state rooms are large, 

airy, and fitted throughout with electric lights and steam heat. 

'ihe special fare for round trip during the Inaugural Week is $3.50, limited to return within four days 

from date of purciiase. For ticket and state-room reservations apply to following : 

Company's Offfce, 817 Pennsylvania Avenue. C. & O. Ticket Office, Corner 14th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. 

B. & O. Ticket Office, 619 Pennsylvani.\ Avenue. S. A. L. Ticket Office, 1434 New York Avenue. 

B. & O. Ticket Office, Corner 15th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Company's Office, Foot 7th Street. 

C. & O. Ticket Office, Corner fath Street and Pennsylvanta Avenue. Aboard Steamers. 

telephone jVo- 7 SO JOHN CALL AH AN, General Manager 





Senator M. A. HANNA 

a National Republican Co 



Mr. GRANT E. HKMir.TON, 
The Man Who Made the Fu 1 D nne. Pa 1 ihe 
Paramount Issue of the Presidenti il 
Campaign. 



AI.I-:X. R. SHKl'ARIl. 
irgt-ly respousihle fur llit 
Washiiialoii Cilv. 



Rev. JOHN D. WHI IN I \ . > I., 
Pie^-idenl of one of our leading rnivcrsities. 



INIOUNT SAINT AGNES COLLEGE FOR YOUNG WOMEN [Pkeparatory School for Little Girls] 

FDUudcd 1S6-, Chartered iS;o. Degrees couferred in Regular and Elective Courses. Mu^ic and Art receive special attention. 



f) 










i&, t ■■#^2:^;iH.' 




^^" M( )UNT WASHINGTON SJ .M I N.\ m FOR BO'.S UNDER THIRTEEN 

Conducted by SAe SISTE'RS OF METiCy. MT. WASHlMGTOy. ■BaUimore County. MAHyLA^fD 




THE CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY 



IVE SUPPLY 
FRESH AIR 

For Ventilating 
Railway Cars 
Street Cars 
Cabs and all 
other closed vehicles 

ALSO- 

Dwellings, Churches, Offices, 
Factories. Theatres, Etc., Etc. 



AO DRAFTS! NO CINDERS! NO DUST OR SMOKE ! 







^ 




, . .^Tj^ • 


llmgp, 


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/a/^naM 




^malie ^ ^^;^^/fe^^'^^ ^^{^ 



GENERAL OFFICES: WASHINGTON, D. C. 



L 



EPPLCrJ 



and Home-dressed Meats win favor wherever iised. 
Eich, delicious. A welcome addition to auy.meal. 



^, LoErrLEK 



Center Harket 
K St. Harket 
O St. Harket 



PATENTS 



QQQH Coutaiiiiug valuable iufovmatiou audipi^J^f^ 
• interesting facts about PATENTS] t 



Call or write for new Book about Patents. 
Just published. Contains many new and 
valuable points about patents ; NEW 
MECHANICAL MOVEMENTS; suggests 
what to invent for profit, and how to sell 
patents Every inventor should have a 
copy of this helpful Book c > [> > > > > 



— O'MEARA <^ CO.. Patent' Attorneys 

N.W. Corner 8th' and G Streets ^ ^ ^ Washington/ D.LC 



I he largest 
si4)ne arcli 
ill the vvorl 



Washington's Most Picturesque Suburban Resort 

It? hi hundreds 
<*•* t-wenty feet 



.<v;^ 



^EomhM 



le^ 



CABIN JOHN BRIDGE, MARYLAND 



RESTAURANT A LA CARTE and TABLE D'HOTE 



BOBINGER BROS., Proprietors 

Washin^toM hmcI Great Falls Klecinc Railway dirrct to tlie Bridge, 
coiiiieciiiig with tlie Metropolitan and Capital Traction lines ^^. 



rn 



AILORING 



We liave made the 
tailoring success of 
Wiishiiigton by doing 

/the finest class of work 
that can be turned^out, and giving you the privilege 
of paying the bill a little each week or month. 



ON 
CREDIT 



L. Koenigsberg 



1417 PenrvaL. Ave. 



WaLshingfon, D. C. 



BEAUTIFY YOUR HOMES ^ 

WITH AR.TISTIC RUSTIC WORK 

ITniiinpancl la^hianulild. Nothing like it toadfl Ilia t, attractive, pictiiresi|iie 
tiiucli to i-fisitleiices and grounus in city or country- Kniilpss designs, un- 
it in it ert in adaptation lor urnainental purposes. Some of the ways in whicli 
it i^irtVctively iisi'd : 

Rustic Chiirs, Settees, Hanging Baskets, Stands, 
Window Boxes, Vases, Brackets and Crosses ; or 
for still larger grounds. Arbors, Gateways, Fences, 
Log Cabins, Etc., any of whicli may be constructed 
in sections and easily erected without defacing the 
lawn »r »?■ »sr »?" »)r •?■ *• 
ry useful. 



iitinge 



uf llii 



le chairs and 
golf linlis anil tennis couris. 
end for illustrated catalogue 



3^19 Fulton St. 



Con^trtic-tion Co. 

[Opp Front] New York, N. Y. 




I4fl^ 



^crio IXfORfORATED 

1IIu§tpatii]6j 

J^alf-fpone 
vj^,; and ]f)ifle ]^Iatcs 

iWg*5 COLOR. WORK a spocio^hy 
liy-" -PHajVE, MAIJ^ 1679 



L R. Thorpi 



Carpets Made and 
^ ^ Laid "^ ^ 
Carpet Cleaning 
Mattress Making 
Feather Renovating 



488 MAINE AVE. S.W. 



SOUTHERN PRINTERS' 



Great Bear Spring 



SUPPLY COMPANY 

W. Seton Kirnt, Mgr. 

304 loth street N.W. 
Washington, I). C. 



1 ncli o f Barnhart Brothers 
i 5pindler. Chicago 



*DRLPHI 


., TABLE 


YOHK 
ICI.YN 


^WATER 


Y City 


? Sold in 


*RK 


9 Glass only 


NY 


9 4 Gallons for 




1 50 Cents 



Great Bear Spring 

(/cs 704ei«»«tith$t. n.m. 

lyv, lUasWitgton, D. e. 




HGETYLENE GflS 

Ttie "EiecfroiKe" 

Table Lamp makes and burns its 
own ACETYLENE, the brigtitest 
rtifictial light known 



Stop and See our 
Generators ^ 5 

and other appliances for utilizing 
A(;ET'i'LE\E 

WALTER B. GLHY 

525 15th Street N.W. 
WASHINGTON. D. C. 



StWUmim OF EV'ENTS. 



MONDAY, MARCH 4. 

n —Gathering ot high government offlcials, 
diplomats. and specially invHed 
guests in the United States Senate 
chamber. 

a —Inauguration ot Theodore Roosevelt, of 
New York, as Vice President o£ the 
United States. Ceremonies in tlie 
Senate, attended by the Pi-esidei.t 
and a distinguished company. 

n— President McKinley takes the oath ot 
office in the presence ot the assem- 
bled n-.ultitude. Delivers inaugural 
address. 

n —Inaugural parade moves from the Cap- 
itol up Pennsylvania avenue. 

„ Illumination ot the Court ot Honor, in 

front ot White House. 

n.— Display ot aerial fireworks from Wash- 
ington Monument Grounds. 

a —Doors ot Pension Office open tor re- 
ception ot guests ot the Inaugural 

a.— Inaugural Ball opened by President 

McKinley. 

TUESDAY, MARCH 5. 
Q —Dedicatory concert. Pension Offlce, In 

honor of the United Statei army. 

Marine Band. 
3 —Dedicatory concert. Pension OOce. In 

honor ot the United States Navy. 

Marine Band. 
—Dedicatory concert. Pension Otnce, in 

honor ot the States of the Union. 

Marine Band. 
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6. 
n —Dedicatory concert, Pension Office, -n 

honor of the Congress of the United 

States. Marine Band, 
n -Dedicatory concert. Pension Office. In 

honor ot the Vice President and 

Speaker of the House of Representa- 
tives. Marine Band and grand 

chorua ot 500 voices. 



Prior to President McKinley's inaugura- 
tion Mr. Roosevelt will have taken the 
oath of the Vice Presidential ottice, the 
same being administered in tiie Senate 
chamber shortly tetore noon. The Vice 
President will make a briet inaugural ad- 
diess in assuming control of a new ses- 
sion of the .Senate The ceremony will bo 
Witnessed by President Mclvinley and a 
distinguished company. 

The President, who is also the Pres- 
ident-elect, will proceed to the inaugural 
stand in front of the Capitol, occupyinj 



with the riii 
tion. The I'- 
ed by two ; 
of the Sen.. ■ 
Senators, liie 
the other 



f .Trsiiro the central post- 
stand will be flank- 
lands, one in front 
or the use of the 
s, and guests, and 
nt uf the House, for the 



The ( erciiioni.s of Inaugiiiniinn. 

President McKinley will take the oath 
of office tor his second term as Chief Ex- 
ecutive of the United States at noon or as 
soon thereafter as possible. The oath will 
be administered by Chief Justice Fuller, 
ot the United Statss Supreme Court, in 
front of the eastern or main entrance to 
the Capitol Building. A special stand has 
be"n constructed for the purpose, and tne 
ceicmony will take place in the open aJr. 



of nepresentatives. Representatives- 
elect, and their families and guests. 

The ceremonies will for the first lime be 
conducted by a joint committee of the 
Senate and House, the custom having 
been hitherto to leave the conduct ot in- 
auguration entirely in the hands of the 
upper body ot Congress. This year the 
members of the House of Representatlvea 
made a successful stand for recognition, 
and it l9 safe to say that hereafter the 
Congressloral inaugural committees will 
be composed of both Senators and Repre- 
sentatives. 

After President McKinley has taken the 
oath of ofRce he will deliver his Inaugural 
address and then bo entertained at lunch 
at the Capitol before heading the brilliant 
inaugural parade vp Pennsylvania avenue 
to the White House. 

THE OPFICIAb ANNOUNCEMENTS. 

"No person will be admitted to the Sen- 
ate wing ot the Capitol, the Senate galler- 
ies, the floor of the Senate chamber or 
the Inaugural platform without a ticket or 
card signed by the committee of arrange- 
ments, except members of the Senate and 
elective ofllcers. members of the House of 
Representatives and elective officers, ex- 
Presidents and ex-Vlce Presidents, the 
justices of the United States Supreme 
Court and officers (the clerk, reporter and 
marshal), heads of executive departments, 
the Lieutenant General commanding the 
army and his aid, the Admiral of the navy 
and his aid. 

"Tickets of admission and cards (except 
for members-elect) will be good only at 
the Senate bronze door (at the head of the 



marble steps on the east front of the Sen- 
ate wing) and at the lower door under the 
arch beneath these marble steps. 

"The doors of the Senate chamber will 
be or»ned at 11 o'clock a. m. to those en- 
titled to admission, as follows: 

"The President, the President-elect. 

"The Vice President-elect. 

"Ex-Presidents and ex-Vice Presidents. 

"The Chief Justice, associate justices 
and officers of the Supreme Court. 

"Senators-elect and ex-Senators. 

"Amba.'^sadors and Ministers of the 
United States. 

"Ambasadors and ministers of foreiarn 
countries who have been presented of- 
ficially to the President. 

"Heads of executive departments. 

"Members, members- elect and elective 
officers of the House of Representatives. 

"Governors of States and Territories. 

"The Lieutenant General commanding 
the army and his aid. 

"The Admiral of the navy and his aid. 

"The Lieutenant General of the armv, 
retired. 

"Officers of the army and navy who, by 
name, have received tho thanks of Con- 
gress. 

"Ex-Speakers of the House of Repre- 
sentatives. 

"Ex-Secretaries and ex-Sergeant-at- 
Arms of the Senate. 

"Judges of the Court of Appeals, and of 
the Supreme Court of the District of Co- 
lumbia- 

"Marshal of the District of Colum.bia. 

"Judges of the Court of Claims. 

"The Commission^-rs of the District of 
Columbia. 

"The secretary of the Smithsonian In- 
stitution. 

"The Librarian of Congress. 

"The architect of the Capitol and his 
assistant. 

"The superintendent of public buildings 
and grounds. 

"The Supreme Court, headed by its of- 
ficers, will enter the Senate chamber in a 
body at 11:45 a. m., and be announced. 

"The House of Representatives, headed 
by its officers, will enter the Senate cham- 
ber in a body at 11:50 a. m., and be an- 
nounced. 

ESCORT TO THE CAPITOL. 

"The President, the President-elect, will 
be escorted to the Capitol by the commit- 
tee of arrangements, and will enter the 
Senate wing by the bronze door. The 



President, the President-elect, will go dl-- 
lectly to the President's room, where he * 
will remain until he enters the Senate 
chamber. Having been escorted to the • 
Senate chamber and ii^troduced by tne . 
committee of arrangements, he will occu- 
py the seat reserved for him in front of: 
the Vice President's desk. The committee ■ 
of arrangements will occupy the seats on i 
his left. 

"The Vice President-elect will be accom-- 
panied to the Senate by the committee of: 
arrangements, will enter the Senate wing ; 
at the bronze dour, and will go to the Vice 
President's room. From there he will go 
to the Senate chamber, v/here the oain ol 
otflce will be administered to him by the 
President of the Senate pro tempore, just 
before the adjournment of the present 
Senate. 

"After prayer by the chaplain the Vice 
President Bill deliver hie inaugural ail- 
dress and will administer the oath of of- 
fice to the Senators-elect 

PROCESSION TO IN.iUGURAL PLATFORM. 

"After the organization of the Senate 
shall have been completed those asse 
in the Senate chamber 
through the rotunda to the 
the center portico of the Capitol Ju.the 
following order, viz.: 

"The marshal of the District of Colum- 
bia and the marshal of the Supreme Court. 

"Ex-Presidents. r 

"Ex-Vice Presidents. 

"The Chief Justice, associate justices, , 
clerk, and reporter of the Supreme Court. , 

"The Sergeant-at-arms of the Senate. ! 

"The committee of arrangements. | 

"The President, the President-elect. 

"Ambassadors to the United States. 

"Ministers plenipotentiary. 

"The Vice President and secretary of the 
Senate. 

"The Senate of the United States and 
ex-Senators. 

"The Sergeant-at-arms and the clerk ot 
the House of Representatives. 

"Retiring members, members-elect and 
officers ot the House of Representatives. 

"Heads of the executive departments. 

"Governors of States and Territories. 

"The Lieutenant General Commanding 
the army and his aid. 

"The .Admiral of the navy and his aid. 

"The lieutenant general of the army, re- 
tired. 

"Officers of the arm.v and navy who, by 



lose asst" 
will i 
i platfl 
Capitol w 



name, have received the thanks of Con- 
gress. 

"All other persons who have heen admit- 
ted to the floor of the Senate chamber, fol- 
lowed by those who have been admitted 
to the galleries. 

THE INAUGURATION. 

"On reaching the platform the President, 
who is also the President-elect, will take 
the seat reserved for him. the Chief Jus- 
tice on his right and the Sergeant-at-arm.=! 
of the Senate on his left. 

"The committee on arrangements will 
occupy seats next to and behind the Presi- 
dent. 

"Kx-Presidents, ex- Vice Presidents, and 
Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, 
the Vice President, secretary, members of 
the Senate, and ex-Senators will occupy 
seats on the right. 

"The retiring members of the House and 
members-elect will be seated on the right 
of the President next to and behind the 
-Senate. 

r -fria^ectiiplomatic corps will occupy the 
'-e \A,n the left of the President. Gov- 
's ~:^ffht States and Territories, heads of 
d^Tlmments, ihe Lieutenant General com- 
manding the army, the Admiral of the 
"navy, and the ofBcers of the army and 
navy, who. by name, have received the 
thanks of Congress, will take seats on the 
left of the President. 

"Such other persons as are included in 
the preceding arrangements will occupy 
the residue of the platform. 

"When all are assembled the oath of 
office will be administered to the Presi- 
dent-elect by the Chief Justice, or, in his 
absence, by the senior .iustice present. 

"The President will then deliver his in- 
augural address." 

The committee of arrangements con- 
sists of Senators M. A. Hanna, John C. 
Spooner. and James K. Jones, and Rep- 
resentatives J. G. Cannon, John Dalzell, 
and Thomas C. McRae. 



THr. I\ ,\LC;UI«AI. PAHADi:. 



The inaugural parade this year will be a 
notable pageant In many respects. It will 
be marked by the first participation of na- 
tive troops from the Islands that came 
into the possession of the United States 



as a result of the Spanish-American war 
of 1S9S. A battalion of volunteer troops 
from Porto Rico has been brought on by 
the government by transport especially to 
taite part in the parade, and it is needless 
to say the appearance of the islanders lu 
line will awaken widespread interest and 
enthusiasm. 

The cadets of the United States Mill- 
itary Academy at West Point and of 
the United States Naval Academy at 
Annapolis will take part in the pa- 
rade for the first time since the second 
inauguration of President Grant, in 1S73. 
Troop B, First Texas Cavalry, the mem- 
bers of which accomplished such heroic 
duty during the grewsome and thrilling 
days following the devastation of Gal- 
veston by a hurricane and flood last fall, 
will also be in line. The State has sent 
the troop on in recognition of its services 
on the occasion mentioned. 

An innovation in the way of music ar- 
rangements in the parade has been secur- 
ed through the efforts of the inaugural 
music committee, of which Mr. William 
H. Rapley is chairman. By this arrange- 
ment there will be a continuous flow of mu- 
sic along every portion of the line of 
march, numbers on telegraph poles at in- 
tervals indicating when such a band shall 
leave off, and the one following take up, 
the martial strains. The music committee 
has also made arrangements whereby only 
one band, the United States Marine, shall 
play "Hail to the Chief" in passing the 
President's reviewing stand in the court 
of honor. It was surmised that the Chief 
Executive might be interested in hearing 
some other selections, while the honor 
intended in "Hail to the Chief" is all the 
more accentuated by restricting its ren- 
dition to one band, and that the represen- 
tative national organization. 

The parade will move up Pennsylvania 
avenue from the Capitol grounds to 
Washington Circle, at Twenty-second 
street, where it will be disbanded. From 
Fifteenth to Seventeenth streets the pa- 
geant will move within a court of honor, 
in the southwest stand of which will be 
the President, he having headed the pa- 
rade up to the arrival at that point. 

The parade will move between 1:30 and 
2 o'clock the afternoon of March 4. The 
President will be inaugurated promptly 
at noon, but will afterward be entertain- 
ed at lunch, co It Is anticipated be will 
not be ready to return to the revlewlnc 



point In front of the White House until 
the time Indicated. 

Gen. Francis Vinton Greene, of New 
York, who served with such distinction as 
a general of volunteers during the Span- 
ish-American war in the Philippines, is 
grand marshal of the parade, having 
been appointed to that position by Sen- 
ator M. A. Hanna, chairman of the Re- 
publican National Committee. The pa- 
rs; de will be made up of two grand divi- 
sions, first, military, and second, civic. 
The arrangements in detail, commanding 
officers of brigades and divisions, are set 
forth in the following orders issued by 
the grand marshal: 



■IHli IXACJGURAI, BAM,, 



With each recurring inauguration of a 
President of the United States the fes- 
tivities in which the people of the nation 
join are carried out on an ever increas- 
ing scale of elaborateness and grandeur. 
This year, as on several occasions in the 
past, the inaugural ball will be held the 
evening of March 4 in the Pension OfTic 
building, located in the park extending 
along the south side of G street, between 
Fourth and Fifth streets northwest. The 
magnificent court of this immense build- 
ing affords suitable accommodations for 
the thousands who gather to make notable 
this great social feature of the induction 
of a Chief Executive into an office, which 
is the highest a republic can give. 

The inaugural ball is a time-honored 
and always en.1oyable function. Tlie new- 
ly announced President attends with the 
members of his personal and official fam- 
ily, and leads the opening grand march. 
It forms a fitting and spectacular climax 
to a day of so much importance to the 
whc-le people. It is confidently expected 
that the ball this year will be the mosr 
resplondent. the most inspiring scene of 
gayety that has yet marked an inaugu- 
ration. Over $18,000 has been spent alone 
in decorations, bunting, electr'city, and 
flowers being the component parts of a 
'scheme, which surpasses in glory of em- 
bellishment and detail the dreams of 0;'i- 
ental royalty. 

The general color effect will be a most 
delicate shade of yellow, known as old 
ivory. The celling will be a canopy of 
gracefully looped bunting, studded with 



innumerable incandescent lights bui 
within frosted glass. There will b- 
glare of dazzling arc lights, but ai: 
tistic mellow glr.w from the incande- 
bulbs. The balccnies which surround 
court, the grand columns that reach fi 
tiled floor to arching roof, will all be d 
orated lavishly by the most skilled 
tisans. The decorations have been pi; 
ned and carried out by a select cornn 
tee, of which Mr. James Rush Ma' sh 
a prominent architect, is the chairm 
The bunting is furnished in lOfi.O'iQ m 
lots by C. H. Koster, of New York:' 
electrical devices and arrangements 
the Electric Motor and Equipment Co 
pany, of N"er;aik. and the flowers by 
H. Small & Sens, of Washington : 
New Y'ork. The latter firm furnished 
flowers four years ago. This year Am 
can B?auty roses, rare orchids, and thJ 
sar ds of yards of twining vines of gr^ 
stuffs form the basis of the floral schen 
which is the most extravagant yet : 
tempted. 

The ballroom doos will be opened a 
o'clock, but the ball proper will not I 
gin until an hour later. During the 
terim the far-famed United States 1! 
rine Band, under the direction of Lie 
William H. Santelmann. and espocia 
augmented for the occasion, will rent 
a promenade programme. 

THE PRESIDENT'S ARRIVAL. 

The President, accompanied by Mrs. S 
Kinley, will arrive at the ball about 
o'clock, being escorted hither by 5 
John Joy Edson, chairman of the inaus 
ral committee. He will at once retire 
the room set apart for his use — the spec 
chambers of the Commissioner of P- 
sions. in the southwest corner of the bui 
ing. entered from the first balcony. V 
President and Mrs. Roosevelt will arri 
about the same time, having been esco 
ed by members of the inaugural comm 
tee. Special rooms have also been ; 
aside for the use of Mr. Roosevelt's par 
as well as for the members of the Cabii 
o.nd their families and the diploma 
corps. 

As soon as the President has laid asi 
his wraps and announced his readine 
the opening march of the ball will be 1 
gun. It will be led by the President a 
Mrs. McKlnley, escorted on either side 
Chairman Edson and Lieut. Gen. Nels 



A. Miles, comraandlne officer of the Unit- 
ed Slates army, and chairman of the re- 
ception committee. Following the Presi- 
dent and his party will come the Vice 
President and Mrs. Roosevelt, the mem- 
bers of the Cabinet and their families. 
Admiral and Mrs. George Dewey, and 
such other persons as the President may 
designate. The several hundred members 
of the reception committee, including the 
justices of the Supreme Court and other 
judiciary, all the United States Senators, 
members of the House of Representatives, 
the Republican National Committee, ant 
prominent citizens from all parts of the 
country, will form a double line through 
which the Presidential party will first 
pass. 

After making a tour of the ball-room 
and formally opening the function. Presi- 
dent McKinley and his immediate party 
will take up their places on the Presiden- 
tial stand at the west end of the hall, 
fourteen feet above the floor level. Here 
President McKinley will receive a few in- 
vitd guests. During the evening he will 
be entertained at supper. The ball having 
been opened the dancing will be taken in 
charge by the members of the floor and 
promenade committee, under the direction 
of the chairman. Dr. Ralph Jenkins. The 
music stand is placed at the east end of 
the hall, and the entire eastern third of 
the floor space will be given over to the 
dancers. 

THE SUPPER ARR.-VNGEMEXTS. 

More care and pains have been given 
the supper feature of the ball this year 
than at any time heretofore, and an inno- 
vation has been recorded by the erection 
of a banquet hall at the cost of several 
thousands of dollars along the south front 
of the building. The hall will be enterf'd 
Ihrough the rooms to the east of the 
south entrance, and the service of the 
supper will begin promptly at 8 o'clock, 
continuing until the close of the ball. The 
arrangements seem to be well niah per- 
fect. The kitchen will he located beneath 
the dining hall, and the viands will be 
brought up through wells. dispensing 
with the usual throng of bustling waiters 
almost entirely. The consiruction of the 
banquet hall insures comfort and ampW 
accommodations for all, and there will be 
no danger of crowding, thus doing away 
with the possibility of damaged gowns. 
The banquet arrangementR were made un- 
der the direction of % committee headed 



by Mr. John T. Devlne. The supper will 
be served by Caterer Charles Rauscher, 
of this city, the following menu having 
been decided upon: 



Bouillon. 
Consomme of Chicken a 1 
Clam Broth. 

Lobster Farcies. 



Oyster Sautes with White Wine Sauce. 
Croquettes Exquises, with French Peas. 



COLD— 

Boned Capon. 
Cold Tongue In Jelly. 

Cold Filet ol Beet. 
Mayonnaise of Chicken. 

Sandwiches— assorted. 
Small RMs. 



Ham in Jelly. 

Potato Salad. 

RlUcttes. 



Gl<ic< 



Fancy Charlotte. Fancy Meringue. 

Chesse Straws. Cakes AssortSs. 

Peppermints. Bonbons. 

Salted Almonds. Brandied Cherries. 

Cafe. 



INAUGURAL BALL SOUVENIR. 

There are absolutely no tree tickets to 
the inaugural ball. Single tickets are sold 
at $5 each, 'his price including a souvenir. 
Supper tickets will cost $1 each. Both 
classes of tickets are on sale at all banks 
and many prominent business houses, 
where signs to that effect are displayed. 

The souvenir for the present ball is a 
delightful departure from the ordinary 
engraved cards, bound with ribbon, here- 
tofore distributed on similar occasions. 
The committee in charge, headed by Mr- 
John B. Wight, took advantage of the 
fact that this is the one-hundredth anni- 
versary of the inauguration of Presidents 
in the District of Columbia to prepare a 
souvenir book containing a portrait of 
each President of the United States and a 
brief account of the ceremonies attendinsr 
each inauguration. These portraits are 
reproductions of steel plate engravings 
from the Bureau of Engraving and Print- 
ing, where the paper money of the coun- 
try Is made, and the descriptions have 
been prepared from material to be found 



In the Library of Congress. The book also 
contains a handsome steel plate engrav- 
ing of the President and Vice President 
elect and a steel plate engraving; contain- 
ing a list of the names of the inaugural 
committee. Twelve thousand copies have 
been printed tor distribution with the ball 
tickets, together with the dance card cov- 
ers and inserts. 

PROMENADE AND DANCE MUSIC. 
The music tor the inaugural ball was 
arranged for by a committee headed by 
Mr. William Harryman Rapley. As stated, 
the promenade numbers will be rendered 
by the United States Marine Band, while 
the dance programme of twenty-four 
numbers wil be turnished by an orchestra 
of 125 pieces, under the leadership of Mr. 
William A. Haley, director of Haley's 
Washington Concert Band. The respective 
programmes have been approved, as fol- 
lows: 

PROMENADE SELECTIONS. 

Rendered by the United States Marine 
Band, William H. Santelmann, conduc- 
tor- 
Overture, • 'Jubilee" Weber 

BAND. 

Overture, "America," Herbert 

Orchestra. 

Fantasia, "Faust" Gounod 

BAND. 

Grand march, "Tannhauser" Wagner 

Orchestra. 

Grand march, "Huldigung" Wagner 

BAND. 
Selection, "The Fortune Teller" Herbert 

DANCE PROGRAMME. 

Rendered by an orchestra of 125 pieces, 
under direction of Will A. Haley: 

Waltz, "Blue Danube" Strauss 

Two-step, "Nations on Parade." 

BAND. 

Lanciers. "The Monks of Malabar" Englander 

Promenade characteristic, "Salome" Loraine 

BAND. 
Two-step, "Hall to the Spirit ot Liberty," .. ..Sousa 

Waltz. "La Carmela" Witmark 

Promenade, patriotic fantasia, "The Voice of 

Our Nation" Santelmann 

Waltz, "Foxy QuiUer" De Kovon 

Two-step. "Goo-goo Eves" Cannon 

BAND. 

Lanciers, "International" Tobani 

Promenade. Slavonic dance No. 8 Dvorak 

Two-step. "Inaugural" Haley 

Waltz. "Vienna Beauties" C. M, Zlehrer 

Promenade. Intermezzo and "Dance Espagn- 
ola," from "Suite rArlealenne" Btzet 

BAND, 



Waltz, "Country Club" Ttje I 

Two-step, "Peace Forever" Lacalll I 

Promenade, "In Darkest Africa" Sous" 

BAND. 

Waltz, "Dreams of Childhood" Waldteufi 

Two-step, "Little Africa" Wilmart 

BAND. 

Lanciers, "Robin Hood" De Kove- 

Promenade, "Fackeltanz No. 3" Meyerbee 

BAND. 

Two-step, "Stars and Stripes Forever" Sous 

Waltz, "Wedding ot the Winds" Hal 

National anthem, "The Star Spangled Ban- 
ner" Ke 

BALLROOM REGULATIONS, 
Pension Office, Judiciary Square, Wash 
ington, D. C. 

1. The entrances will be at the F, G 
and Fifth street doors. 

2. Positively no return checks. 

3. No smoking allowed in the building 
This order is imperative. 

4. All articles found should be turnet 
over to the officer in charge of polici 
headquarters, which is located on th. 
first floor, east of G street entrance. 

5. No charge in cloak rooms. - 

6. No hats, boniiets, overco^ 
cloaks allowed to be worn on the ^ jorr 
floor, nor any canes or umbrellas ro bt 
carried. 

7. The east section of the hall will be 
floored over to accommodate these who 
desire to participate in the dances. Mem- 
bers of the floor committee are authoriz- 
ed to keep it clear for that purpose. 

8. Gentle.nen accompanied by ladies will 
deposit their coats in the sections assign- 
ed to ladies. 

9. For the comfort of the guests seats 
have been arranged in rooms on the maini 
floor and the flrst and second balconies^ 
Under no circumstances will chairs be per^ 
initted to be taken from these rooms. 

The following committees are directly 
connected with the ball room ceremonies, 
and are designated by appropriate badges: 

Inaugural committee. 

Reception committee. 

Committee on decoration of ballrooi 

Banquet committee. 

Committee on comfort at ball. 

Carriage committee. 

Public order. : 

MANAGEMENT. 

The Inaugural committee will occupy 
the room of the chief clerk. No. 39. second 
floor. 'This room will be connected by 
electric slrnala with the antrancea to the 



hniiHincr- .iir, hv toipnhon* with the 7 Batteries of leweled mines. b»- ed with American flag. 33. Revolving; spiral columns In Je' 

pr/ncpfi ?ooms '^ The^ chalrmiS John girinin/ with a prlsmaTlo colo?^" Ihowlr 19. Flight of fiery wigglers. A conUn- lance fires, with varleeated colors of c 

Jov Edson and in his absence, the sec- of diamond Are. forming a beautiful foun- uous stream of gyratcry figures to be set tral rmgs, projecting high In the air 

??tary of the cimmittee, Harrison Ding- tain effect, suddenly exploding with report ott simultaneously, producing bouquets of piece of mechanism, which after aser 

n^, will have authorit;. and should be tillins the air with fiery-tailed wlgglers al the latest tmts >,•„•„„. .„fn o£,<=05'o">ons, disappears from view w 

r-allpd iVnnn tn l;pttle ariv dlsDute that of fantastic Shanes ending with bursts -"• IJischarge ot fifty tourbillions, spin- a loud report. 

may arisT as to IdmlsslSn toThe buul- of pearl shSwerfand trootfng stars'! ning like a horizontal wheel, forming um- -* Charlton's wonder bombshells ea 

inS nr fn%r,t- tto r t thereof and tn deter- s TTire niptnrp "niT President" brellas of fire in ascent and descent. bombshell making from ten to twen 

mn;e°any qu"lst^%"plrtafnfAg^to the'^man- lLcc f e'por'lrait of Pre°sydent^Mcmn1ey, . a. Balloon display. Fljghts of Amer- five bursts, dlscharg,ing ail the finest 

"-ement. except such matters as are un- festooned with the national colors, and lean banner ba'loons Illuminated with fects known to Pyro/echny ^„^. ^„ 

„"„„tr„i „fti,o ^h,irTr,on nf the vari- „„,v,<.in=v,,=,i „Mt), >>=ttorio= ^f oio^trin fires magnesium flash-lights and displaying 35 Gigantic batteries of saucisso 

fire of mtermedu 
colors, finally 1 

L'i^li';-°mTn°o£°\h"e"r"e^ce^?ron^^c^omnimee""Ati 'Z ""SoX^hell display, displaying ^^-^^-j^'^tLf f 't^' fe^^^^ ^"^ ''^f'^^^^'^^Khi^i 

matters connected with the dancing and chrvsanthemums, willow-tree, dragons" ^£"'?^' /^'i'^^'^f^pi' '^^ twentieth century jjissmg and squirming in every duectL 

promenade will be under the control of clusters of grapes, necklaces, and scrolls "^^f^'l-f^S^, '^^'/''^Hreflies throwing vast '%Y ofan'^ .anoni of ^nld nroduced 

Dr. Ralph Jenkins, chairman and direct- of great brilliancy and startling effects. „,^h!rl°nf .rWinesnl^kles through the ^*'- °'^^'i'^ K'^^T'h^?i= ^ iaoh hom^h 

or, and those pertaining to the comfort 11° Aluminium flash light rockets, form- ",^™5fi„^°Jin^iThr®oad stream of Chl^^^^ manimoth bombshe Is each bombsh 

ot'guests under the control of Maj James ing a gorgeous veil of feathery plumes, |'Y.<^'5P^^y^flSe? ""spangfes S ^oldeS^bfanket o^fire Ind flamlln^ 

E. Bell, chairman of the committee on embellished with topaz and emerald com- fi?J^„f"^ off efectriSt" sdntiUationl 1^1^^" blanket of fire and flame in 

<:omfon and ball. ets bombshells in national col- 24. Flight of lOO electric suar rockets, 3^; grand fusillade of national batter 

or^' each boniblhefl ODen?ng ildth red opening with parachutes, holding a silver ;„ red, white, and blue, throwing a cd 

OISPLAY OV FIREWORKS. changing to white and finfshh^g wfti; ^tar ot great brilliancy; these float a R,ng ,i„^„^'3 g^ream of national colors high 

cnangmg to wniie ana uiusiiins wiiii ^jsjance, changing color several times, fj^g gir. 

' y^, • , ,„ ^ ^ ^ „. I. J ,.1. ending with a flash of Intense white that 33. colored bouquets produced by t 

i \iVT,ifippnt dlsDlav of fireworks will !'■ ^'^ plUars of flame, embellished with ^m ugut up the entire heavens. simultaneous discharge of 100 rockets co 

be£---^-45o"clock hi evening of March ruby batteries surrounding and crown- 25. Battery display. Mammoth spreaders tainlng sunflowers, popples, violets, pe 

r%„^ Jhe MonSment grounds As the >"g '^e Monument with burs s of colored .j^hich break Into golden stars, tipped cock plumes, and spur-pointed stars. 

iVnJra^,^PiiVnt^rTlv-aefral"n character 'meteors and showers o^ , . . 39. Electric bombshell display, an auro 

?hP^,if,^lTv mav brseenTrom all pirts of ■'"ars. streamers, whirligigs, and mam- gg. Display of 100 mammoth rockets of borealis shower of electric stars fallli 

h! Pi,v ^T^P comD?lte orS^ramme fol- "'^th spreaders. changing tints, and a large number of sjowly to the earth. 

ttje cit>. ine compieie piogiamuie lui 14. Indian jugglery, beginning with pris- streamers of brilliant fires, terminating 40. Chinese serenaders, a bombardme 

'°^^' matic Illuminations, followed by brilliant with shell bursts of brilliant stars. of masked batteries of colored meteoi 

1. Salute of iOl lyddite bombs will be shower of diamond fire, then suddenly ex- 27. Illumination of Monument and intermingled with showers of sunflre, fi 
heard ten miles away. ploding with a loud report, filling the air grounds with flash-light packet bengal ing the air above and around to an li 

2. Carmine illumination of the Monu- with fiery-tailed spinners, forming fan- fires. . ,, . mense height with colored streamei 
ment and grounds, with electric suns and tastic circles of fire and colored rings. 28. Flight ot mammoth bombshells, each forming scintillating fires and jewel 
packet flres. 15. Whistling Jacks. These pyrotechnic- shell discharging several parachutes, to jets. 

3 Ascension of balloons, with mag- al curiosities fly through the air whistling which are suspended chains of colored 41.— Sapphire showers, showing color 
neslum flash lights and a stream of golden and screaming in wild, fantastic, unearth- stars. illumination, with occasional bursts 

spray, followed by an explosion of tinted ly furor, terminating with a fusillading 29. Chromatic battery display, throw- sapphires. 

gems changing into an electric illumina- report. ing forth brilliant changing colored stars, 42. Prize cometic rockets, ascending 

tion 16 Rocket display. Eight-pound hang- flnishing ui wheels of flashing fire. a great height, discharging stars of gre 

4. Rocket display, crossing and in- ing chain and floating wreaths, rising 30. Chinese fans, with many changes of size and brilliancy with changes of col< 
tersecting in their flight, forming a poly- like an Eifel tower to an immense height, brilliant fire and centers of variegated 11- which floats slowly away, suddenly i 
chromatic canopy of glittering radiance. throwing out links of diamond chains, luminations, ending in an Oriental tan solving themselves into revolving whe< 

5. Electric fountain; a novel and beau- festoons, and crosses of uncas, which of peacock feathers. of brilliant fire, ending with bursts 
tiful representation in floral fire ot a float awav and finally disappear in the 31. Battles of the Anacondas, opening tinted gems. 

fountain throwing upward and outward distance with colored magnesium fiashes. with a rich stream of brilliant fire and 43. Cornucopia rockets, on reaching th< 
liquid drops of spangles and sprays of fire, 17. Mandarin bombshells, breaking three colored stars, terminating with a Ljurst altitude release mammoth shower of bri 
terminating in a crown of variegated col- times, producing Gattling gun effects and of fiery dragons exploding with loud re- iant rubies, followed in quick successli 
ored flowers of every hue. beautiful showeis of electric stars, scin- ports. by a second and third bursts of emera 

6 Flight of mammoth bombshells; tillating in green and azure tints. The 32. Wizard fountains, starting with a meteors and shooting star effects, 
on reachi"ng their height produce links of whole producing one of the most beautl- stream of golden spray, followed by an 44. Display of numerous unequal 
•diamond chains, changing colors, follow- ful effects. explosion of colored gems, changing Into bombs, each exploding three shells 

ed by bursts of electric fires, embellished IS. "Our Vice President." Lance fire an electric Illumination, followed by an eight distinct bursts. 
'With topaz and emerald comets. portrait of our Vice President, embellish- eruption of silver snakes. 45. Explosion ot mines of whlstline wl 



Slers, forming a sylvan fountain, which bombs, broadsides of batteries, explogions of smoke mounting- from the pyre urns ported or else kept under lock and keyj 

fhanges to myriads of fiery contortionists, of mines, multitude bombshells, swinging will be illumined by the white, piercing until the visiting crowds have begun their' 

terminating with loud reports. columns of silver and gold lights, squirm- rays of powerful search-lights concealed homeward journey Washington has al- 

4C. Plight of bombshells, discharging ers darting and tw-isting, and GOO special at the base of each vessel of fire. The ways enjoyed the reputation of sivina- its 

floating testoons and long hanging chains aerial bouquets. illumination of the court will conUnue visitors the most efticient nrotection dur- 

of diagons. showers of pearls, diamond 60. Good nieht over the nights of March 4, 5, and o. ing inaugural and other ^reat niihlic nc 

^'S,'^'^'*"'' revolving electric cascades. Seats in the court of honor reviewing casions and there is no reason to rtoiiht 

47. Cascade of golden spray, forming a stand are on public sale at 1338 F street but that her proud ?e?ord^n this resoect 

^"^^^f.^^^ ^r^^ -- ->-- - «<'-«• ~- ., ......,., ,...,, ^l^r--^ - t^^J^rSc^n^^t 

lights, and terminating in a grand burst jn addition to the four reviewing stands 

Asxi^lt^t/i-' 1 f u I J J. ■*■ feature of the present Inauguration mentioned above, but three other stands . 

„i,,',ii^ („ " o^ 1. fS « " cloud, ais- which is entirely new in the history of have been authorized by the inaugural 

?«iH5„ Ji!5^^S?.il''( "r^.!"^' '■""' s"'''^ ^celebrations is the magnificent court committee for public use. These are .,.,,,,„-,,,,, ._,,,,.. ,.,,,, ..,^.^,,„^ 

nllriu^Fr. ^"^ '''^f'.P'?'"^,, '" mldheavens, of honor which has been constructed on located along the south side of Pennsyi- ■*<- 1 <»I-»OI).ATI()\ I.()|{ \ Is-ITORS. 

producing a ponertul and grand illumlna- Pennsylvania avenue, from Fifteenth to vania avenue, one extending from Thir- 

4^ Atsp-ip fni-nfnin<= Qncncnricri i„ n,M Seventeenth Streets, extending in front teen-and-a-half to Fourteenth streets, one AVashington is the one large city of the 

air from the mammoth halkK^n^ rlKchTrS' ?f '^'^ Treasury Building, the Whi'.e along the fountain space immediately entire country where the visitors have 

i '^'\?"/,>"^ "p^"^;?'^" P/l"S°"^' r'ffi,^ House, and the State, War, and Navy west of Ninth street, and another from the first consideration on the occasion of 

fires forming festoons of rnhilfanii^"' Building. Along the thoroughfare tower- Seventh to Ninth streets. Tbe observa- a celebration comparing in magnitude to 

fralds hlinrtiiitJ tn^efhpr ovpr a ?bv^w" '"° pylons have been raised on either tion stand just south of the Treasury and that of the inauguration of a President, 

ine "un fire ^'^Beiner o^ er a revoiv- gj^jg^ ga^h surmounted by a pyre urn in commanding- a full view of the Avenue. In no other municipalitv do the residents 

■^n '-Rnruptrtritiiav QV,r.r,fino- =to,.<, ^oi=,= which fires will be lighted day and night, has been constructed by the clerks of the take the pains to see that all strangers 

in^' showers n7shnntw«,^^^ The seml-circular driveway within the Ex- Treasury Department for their own use. within their gates are comfortably quai-- 

cofors of the n iXw soreamn- and dfs ecutive Mansion grounds, leading through tercd and cared for as in the Nation's 

«o?[n/ n a c? id or'sn?rkfin " mKt "^e immense port-cochere of the historic • Capital. For the purpose of attendV »o' ' 

" 51 RomhshPlI isnlW with vivM «!.=>,»» buUdlng. has been transformed into a nitnTRrTl Kr THI? PIlRlir ^^^ accommodation of visitors, iJ ,- 

of iightning f, owed bv thunderous re Pathway between Grecian colonnades. PKOTECTI NG TH E PUBLIC. ^^^^ „„ public comfort is organil* ^- 

ports? endin.^ w , hi cloudburst of eh>ctrl,^ The inaugural parade will pass through , ery four years, and at such other Tnmes 

t.u. I., ciiuiii„ « in a ciouuoursi or eiectriL ^^e court of honor, continuing directly Every safeguard to life and personal as the occasion requires. This year the 



im. 



, Flight of i-nckpts Twn Vii.nrirori A wBStward OH Pennsylvania avenue, how- property that can be devised will be committee is presided over by Mr. _._. _. 
pound p"rismail' cascade parachute wil *'^'®''' ''"'^ '^°^ making the detour through thrown around the visitors to the National Weller. 

low tree, electirc prize cometic and' tei-»- *''® White House roadway. The court Capital during the inaugural period. De- Mem.bers of the rommittee and offir-iaf 
fcope repeating effects '^"''' ^""^ *®'- will be flanked at each corner by a re- tectives from every large city of the coun- g^|e'^_^rouna mi?ita?v Cadets fn fuU imi 

r,3%lightot"l00 bombshells, with search- ^'^^''"^ ^'/"'^ which in elaborateness of trj^men who are thoroughly familiar fo™-^wm be^aT ea?h'orthe raHroad stal 
light, magnesium, chrysanthemum, gol- design and construction eclipses all for- with all the noted and lesser criminals ^jo^g and steamboat wharves to meet vis- 
den rod, poppies, magnolias, fuscia, and mer efforts along this line. President abroad in the land--will be m ^ ashington i,oj.s and conduct them to the quarters 
heliotrope effects. McKinley and \ ice President Roo.sevelt, several days prior to March 4, and will ^j-.^t may have been assiTed or other- 

54 Flights of rockets, producing a vast together with an invited party, -nill re- co-operate with the local police oflicials ^-i^g secured in advance and to give in- 
' 1 .■:ii of scarlet, green, and violet view the parade from a center box In in ridding the city of sneak-thieves, pick- formation fuUv and without expense to 
' ■ -. tipped with glittering je-svels. the southwest stand of the court. The pockets, and other undesirable guests, those who have come without making'a'- 

' iinbette fountains, discharge of cc- Presidential box will be inclosed in glass Congress has appropriated $10,000 for addi- rangements ahead The members of the 
.' iiMii spinners, fcllowed by streams of and heated in case the weather is cold tional police purposes for the inaugura- committee on hand at the depots will be 
ti-ailing star? in colored streamers, end- and raw. Senator Hanna, chairman of tion. ready to supplv the" names of hotels and 

Ing with a flight of radiating fires, with the Republican National Committee, -n-ili Maj. Richard Sylvester, superintendent boarding-houses where rooms and board 
variegated colored centers of supreme entertain the members of that body in a of the Metropolitan police, who is also mav be had, logether with the rates that 
brilliancy. specially constructed stand adjacent to chairman of the inaugural committee on are' to be paid. In oases where the com.- 

56. Niagara Falls in new electric and the northeast corner of the court of public order, will have several hundred mitteemen cannot give .all the information 
aluminum effects. honor. additional policemen fworn in for duty desired, the visitors will be conducted by 

57. Volleys of bombshells, fired simul- By day the court of honor will be a March 4, 5. and 6. The regular police the guides to the headouarters of the 
taneously. producing a grove of palm mass of waving flags and bunting, the na- force, the experienced men, will be con- committee on public com.fort in the Ev.^n- 
trees in chromatic colors. tional colors to be in evidence wherever centrated in the down-town districts, ing Star Buildins-. corner Pennsvlvan.a 

58. Frijijama Japanese effects, fired from the effect may be enhanced and the pat- where the crowds will be greatest, while avenue and Eleventh street. Each'visilor 
rockets which form fantastic figures, re- riotic spirit of the occasion made mani- the temporary men will be given duty in v.dll furthermore be presented gratis with 
leasing burning lanterns in variegated fest. At night the court will glov; -wirh the residence and suburban sections. Anv a map of the city, giving the principal - 
colors. a wealth of electricity. Each pylon and suspicious characters found in the city points of interest, with the hotel or stop- 

59. Grand finale— Flower garden produced Grecian pillar will be marked with in- during the inaugural days will be prompt- ping place secured for them marked in 
by volleys of bombshells, salvos of lydite candescent bulbs, while the white columns ly taken in custody by the police and de- red ink. 



"^ 




NEW YORK, NEWARK, WASHINGTON, D. C, CHICAGO, ILL., KANSAS CITY, M ->. 

Fifth Ave. 817 Broad St. 1225 Pennsylvania Ave. 263 Wabash Ave. 1000 Walnut St. 



Presirteut McKiulev's Second Term will mark fhe 8th term of the Bradbury Piauo in the White House- 



American TIan. ^2.00 

per day ^ 
European Tlan. 

B^oomj. SOctJ up 

Mscltby 
House ^ 

IS to 28 Eajt Pratt Street 

■Baltimore. Md. 
O. A. FOWLEV -^ Manager 



Addi-«SB all cominuiilcatlous direct to Factory, Fultou Street, Brooklyu, N.Y. 




Incixigtiral 'Parade of March 4-, 1901. 



The columu will move in the following order : 
Platoon of Mounted Police. 
Governor's Island Band. 
Grand Marshal— Major-General F. V. Greene, U. S. V. 

Staff.— A. Noel Blakeinan, Chipf of Staff; Lt. Col. John A. John- 
ston, U. S. A., Adjutant General ; Lt. Col. John L. Chamber- 
lain, U. S. A., Chief of Aids; Maj. Rich'd E. Thompson, U. 
S. A., Sifjnal Officer; Brig. Gen. Nicholas W. Day, U. S. V., 
Comnuuiilinf,' Rear Guard; Lieut. Winfleld S. Overton, U. S. 
A., Military Secretary. 

Aides. 

Troop A, of Ohio, as Per.sonal Escort of the President. 

THE PRESIDENT. 

Detachment of Veterans of the Twenty-Third Ohio Volunteers. 

Presidential Party in Carnages. 

MILITARY GRAND DIVISION. 

Maj. Gen. John R. Brooke, U. S. Army, Chief Marshal: 
Staff.— Maj. Wm. A. Simpson, U. S. A., Chief of Staff ; Brig. Gen. 
John F. Weston, U. S. A. ; Col. Hem-y G. Sharpe, U. S. A. ; 
Majors Louis A. LaGarde, U. S. A. ; Abiel L. Smith, U. S. A. ; 
Jan.es L. Lusk, U. S. A. ; Webster Vinson, U. S. A. ; Charles 
McClure, U. S. A. ; Medad C. Martin, U. S. A. ; J. Escourt 
Sawyer, U. S. A. ; Capt. R. B. Bryan, U. S. A. ; Capt. S. S. 
Jordan, U. S. A. ; Lieut. Joseph S. Hen-on, U. S. A. 

FIRST DIVISION. 

Maj. Gen. Willi.\ji Ludlow, U. S. V., Brig. Gen. U. S. Armj', 
Marshal. 

Staff.— Maj. John M. Carson, jr., U. S. V., Chief of Staff ; Maj. H. 
C. Carbaugh, U. S. V., Adjc. General. 

Aides.— Captains E. A. Root, U. S. A. ; C. S. Radford, U. S. M. C. ; 
A. W. Yates, U. S. A. ; C. S. Bromwell, U. S. A. ; Lieuts. Hal- 
stead Dorey, U. S. A. ; G. M. Root, U. S. A. ; W. H. T.schap- 
pat, U. S. A. 



FIRST BRIGADE. 
Col. I. D. De Russy, U. S. Army. 
UNITED STATES FORCES. 

Cori)s of Cadets, U. S. Military Acadoiiiy.— Lieut. 

Col. O. L. Hein, U. S. Army, Commandant. 

Cori).s or Cartets, U. S. Naval Aoadeiny. — Com. Cola- 
han, U. S. Navy, Commandant. 

Eleventh U. S. Infantry.— Maj. R. I. 0. Irvine, U. S. 
Army, Commanding. 

Regiment U. S. Artillery-— Col. F. L. Guenther, LT. S. 
Army, Commanding. 

Battalion Porto Rican Reyimeiit.— Maj. Eben Swift, 
U. S. Army, Commanding. 

Regiment U. S. 3Iarines.— Lieut. Col. P. C. Pope, U. S. 
M. C, Commanding. First Battalion, Lieut. Col. B. R. Russell ; 
Second Battalion, Maj. T. N. Wood ; Third Battalion, Maj. Lin- 
coln Karmany. 

Naval Brigade. — Com. Chas. Belknap, U. S. N., Command- 
ing ; Lieut. F. B. Bassett, U. S. N., Adjutant. First Battalion, 
from U. S. S. Dixie ; Second Battalion, from U. S. S. Topeka, Pu- 
ritan, Dolphin, Sylph ; Third Battalion, from U. S. S. Hartford ; 
Fourth Battalion, from U. S. S. Lancaster. 

Battery I^igiit Artillery.— Capt. Chas. D. Parkhurst, U. 
S. Army, Commanding. 

Squadron U. S. Cavalry.— Col. Wm. A. Rafferty, U. S. 
Army, Commanding. 

SECOND BRIGADE. 
I>istrict of Columl)ia National Guard. 

Brig. Gen. Geo. H. Harries, Commanding ; Capt. Alfred P. 

Robbius, Aid-de-Camp, Acting Adjutant General. 
Staff. — Maj. George Henderson, Surgeon General : 5Ia j. Michael V. 
Tierney, Chief of Ordnance; Maj. Edwin 11. Ni nun > ir, Com 



3 



missary General ; Maj. Charles H. Ourand, Inspector General ; 
Maj. Walter D. Davidge, Jr., Judge Advocate General ; Maj. 
James E. Bell, Inspector General of Rifle Practice ; Maj. Henry 
H. Parmeuter, Quartermaster General ; Maj. Fi-auk L. Ave- 
rill. Chief of Engineers. 
Aides.— Capt. Edward F. Riggs, Capt. C. Fred. Cook, Capt. Andrew 
Parker, Lieut. Com. Sherburne G. Hopkins. 

Engineer Corps. — First Lieut. Roy B. Hayes, Commanding. 

Seeonrt Regiment Infantry.— Col. M. Emmet LTiell, 
Commanding ; Capt. Charles E. Swigart, Adjutant. Fifth Battal- 
ion, Maj. Richard D. Simms, Commanding ; Sixth Battalion, Maj. 
Wiliam E. Harvey, Ctommanding; Fourth Battalion, Maj. Anton 
Stephan, Commanding. 

First Keginient In tantry.— Lieut. Col. Burton R. Ross. 
Commandiiig : First Lieut. Leroy W. Herron, Acting Adjutant. 
First Battalion. Maj. Jesse B. K. Lee, Commanding ; Third Bat- 
talion, Maj. Gkiidie B. Young, Commanding; Second Battalion, 
Maj. Luther H. Reiehelderfer, Commanding. 

Fir.st Separate Battalion.— Maj. Arthur Brooks, Com- 
manding. 

Signal Corps. — First Lieut. , Commanding. 

Naval Battalion. — Com. Robert P. Hains, Commanding. 
First Division, Lieut. Alfred P. Lang, Commanding. Second Di- 
vision, Lieut. Joseph A. Dempf, Commanding. 

Ambulance Corps. — First Lieut. Warren D. Fales, Com- 
manding. 

High School Cad.t Ifegiment of Ifi tantry .—Col. C. E. 

Boesch, Commanding;: ('apt. W. A. Hillebrand, Adjutant. First 
Battalion, Maj. R. Wilson, Commanding. Second Battalion, Maj. 
H. C. Robb, Commanding. 

Colored High School Battalion.— Maj. Walter P. Ray, 
Commanding; First Lieut. Roland R. Johnson, Adjutant. 

SECOND DIVISION. 

Gov. WiLLi.\M A. Stone, of Pennsylvania, Manshal ; Brig. Gen. 
Thomas J. Stewart, Adjutant General. 

Staff-Col. Ezra H. Ripple, Asst. Adjt. Gen.: Frank G. Sweeney, 
Inspector General ; Thomas Potter, Jr., Quartermaster Gen- 
eral ; Lieut. Col. Samuel Moody, Asst. Quartermaster General ; 



Col. Edward E. Robbins, Conimissai-y General ; Lieut. Col 
George M. Halstead, Asst. Commissary General ; Col. John V. 
Shoemaker, Surgeon General ; Col. Prank K. Patterson, In- 
spector of Rifle Practice ; Col. Sheldon Potter, Chief of Ord- 
nance ; Cols. John S. Muckle, Albert J. Logan, Asher Minor. 
Aides. — Lieut. Cols. James Elverson, Jr., Henry Hall, Millard 
Hunsiker, Thomas J. Keenan, Jr., James M. Reid, William L. 
Elkius, Harry C. Trexler, A. Frank Seltzer, Ned Ardeu Flood. 
Charles C. Pratt, J. Milton Taylor, W. Fred Reynolds. 

PENNSYLVANIA NATIONAL GUAKl). 

Maj. -Gen. Charles' Miller, Commanding; Lieut. Col. William J. 
Elliot, Assistant Adjutant General. 

Stafl' — Lieut. Col. John P. Penney, Inspector; Lieut. Col. Howard 
L. Calder, Judge Advocate: Lieut. Col. William F. Richard- 
son, Quartermaster; Lii-ut. T'ol, Austin Curtiu, Commissary of 
Subsistence; Lieut. Col. .Ins.-i.li K. Weaver, Surgeou-iu-t Ihief ; 
Lieut. Col. L. F. Lore., i )iclii:iiirr Officer; Lieut. Col. E. V. D. 
Selden, Inspector of Ritie Practice. 

Aides.— Majs. Sanford Clarence Lewis, Charles J. S. Miller, Lewis 
Beitler. 

DELAWARE.— Governor John Hunn and staff. 
First lieginient of Infantry. 

THIRD BRIGADE. 
Brig. Gen. J. P. S. Gobin. 

Staft'. — Maj. William S. Millar, Inspector: Maj Norman S. Far 
quliar. Judge Advocate; Maj. Orlando L. Nichols, Quarter- 
master; Maj. Simon B. Cameron, Commissary of Subsistence; 
Maj. William P.Clarke, Ordnance Offlcer;" Maj. George H. 
Halberstadt, Surgeon. 

Aides.— Capts. Wm. W. Ingles, Fred. R. Drake. 

Ninth Regiment Infantry. — Col. C. Bow Dougherty, 

Commanding. 

Thirteenth Kegiment Infantry. — Col. Louis A. Wat- 
res, Commanding. 

Twelfth Regiment Infantry.— Col. Charles M. Clement, 

Commanding. 

Eighth Regiment Infantry.— Col. Theodore F. Hoffman, 

Commanding. 

Fourth Regiment Infantry.— Col. Christopher T. O'Neil, 

Commanding. 



Governor's Troop (dismounted).— Capt. Fred M. Ott, 
Ctommanding. 

Battery C (dismounted). — Capt. Francis M. Bean, Coni- 
nianding. 

SECOND BRIGADE. 

Brif;. Gen. John A. Wiley, Major Jolin R. Robertson, Assistant 
Adjutant General. 

Staff. — Major Samuel W. Jefferie, Sr., Inspector; Major Edward 
B. McOorniick, Judge Advocate; Major Lewis A. Aushutz, 
Qnarternm.ster; Major William S. McLain, Commissary of 
Subsistence; Major Samuel C. Milligau, Surgeon; Major Lewis 
T. Brown, Ordnance Officer. 

Aide.— Capt. Frank W. Nesbit. 

Fifth Itegimeut Infantry.— Col. Theodore Bnrchfield, 
Commanding. 

Sixteenth Regiment Infantry.— Col. Willis J. Hul- 
lings, Commanding. 

Kij;liteenth Keyiinent Iiilantry. — Col. Frank I. Rut- 
ledge, Commanding. 

Fourteentli Kesiment Infantry. — Col. William E. 
Thompson, Commanding. 

Tentli Regiment Infantry. — Col. James Elder Bar- 
uett, Commanding. 

Sheridan Troop (dismounted). —Capt. C. S. Jones, Com- 
manding. 

Battery B ( dismounted).— Capt. William C. Wallace, 
Commauding. 

FIRST BRIGADE. 
Brig. Gen. John W. Schall ; Maj. J. Campbell Gilmore, Asst. Ad- 
jutant General. 
Staff. — Maj. Charles H. Worman, Inspector; Maj. Henry D. Pax- 
son. Judge Advocate ; Maj. Thomas C. Steele, Quartermaster; 
Maj. J. Wilkes O'Keill, Commissary of Subsistence; Maj. W. 
J. Ashenfelter, Surgeon; Maj. David S. B. Chew, Ordnance 
Officer. 
Aides. — Captains Thomas J. Dolau and Augustus Di'um Porter. 

First Regiment Infantry. — Col. Wendell P. Bowman, 
Commanding. 



Second Regiment infantry.— Col. Henry T. Dechert, 
Commanding. 

Sixth Regiment Infantry —Col. James B. Coryell, Com- 
mauding. 

Third Regiment Infantry.— Col. Robert Ralston, Com- 
manding. 

Battery A (dismounted ).— Capt. Barclay H. Warburton, 
Commanding. 

AVasliington Infantry. — Capt. Wm. R. Geilfuss, Com- 
mauding. 

THIRD DIVISIOX. 

Maj ir General Joseph Wheeler, U. S. Y., Brig. General, U. S. A., 
retired. Marshal. 

Staff.— Capt. J. A. Dapray, U. S. Army, Adjutant General; Col. 
Allen C. Bakerwell, U. S. V.; Lieut. Col. John Jacob Astor, 
U. S. v.; Capts. Wm. Astor Chandler, U. S. V.; F. S. Hodg- 
son, U. S. v.; Jo.?hiia Brown, U. S. A.; Thos. B. Huych, Sur- 
geon; John A. Wyeth, Leonard Wilson, U. S. Y.; Wilsau 
Smith, N. Y. N. G.; Irving McKesson, N. Y. N. G.; Mario;i 
Wyeth, U. S. Y. 

FIRST BRIGADE. 

Brig. General Charles King, V. S. Y., Marshal. 

NEW JERSEY. 

Governor Forrest M. Yoorhees; A. C. Oliphaut. Adjutant General. 

NATIONAL, GUARD. 

Provisional Regiment. — Col. Q. O'M. Gilmore, Com- 
mauding. 

Battery Ligiit Artillery. — Capt. LT. G. Lee, Command- 
ing. 

Essex Troop. — Capt.R. Wayne Parker, Commanding. 

GEORGIA. 

Georgia Art. of Savannah. — Capt. J. C. Simmonds, Com'dg. 

CONNECTICUT. 
Governor George P. McLean; Col. Wm. E. F. Sanders, As.sistant 

Adjutant General. 
Staff. — Brig. General George H. Kniglit, Siu'geon General; Brig. 
General Phelps Montgomery, Judge Advocate General; Cols. 
Watson J. Miller and Walter E. Cue, Aides. 



MASSACHUSETTS. 

NATIONAL, GUARD. 

Provisional Keaiiiieiit, First Heavy Artill«*ry. — 

Miij. C. P. Nutter, Commanding; First Battalion, Capt. N. O. 
Dauforth : Second Battalion, Capt. Albert Chick ; Third Battalion, 
Capt. F. F. Cutting. 
MARYLAND.— Gov. John Walter Smith; Maj. Geu. John S. 

Saunder.s, Adjutant General. 
Staif. — Brig. Gen. Chas. A.Chipley, Quartermaster General ; Brig. 

Gen. Murray Vandiver, Chief of Ordnance ; Brig. Gen. Fi-an- 

cis E. Waters, Judge Advocate General ; Brig. Cren. L. V. 

Baughman, Inspector General ; Brig. Geu. John B. Sohwatka, 

S.irgeou General. 

Aides. — Cols. Chas. Goldsborough, Geo. M. Upsher, John Waters, 
Arthur P. Gorman, Israel Rosenfeld, Robert Taylor, Albert 
W. Sisk, Wm. L. Henry, John P. Moore, Arthur D. Foster. 

NATIONAL, GUAUD. 

Gen. Lawrasou Rigg.* ; Col. Allen McLean, Adjutant General. 
Staff- Col. John M. T. Finney, Chief Surgeon; Maj. Charles R. 

Spence, Chief Quartermaster ; Maj. Frank W. Coale, Chief 

Commissary ; Maj. Josiah Pierce, Jr., Chief of Ordnance ; Maj. 

C. V. Starkloff, Paymaster. 
Aide.— Lieut. Markham Marshall. 

Fourth Regiment.— Col. Willard Howard. 

Filth Uegiinent.— Col. Frank Markoe. 

First Regiment. — Lieut. Col. McLean, 

First Sep. Co. Infantry— Capt. Spencer. 

Troop A.— Capt. Shirley. 

Battalion Naval Reserves. — Capt. J. E. Emerson 

Veteran Corps, Fifth Regiment. — Capt. Gaither. 

South Carolina Battalion of Infantry. 

SECOND BRIGADE 
Brig. Gen. Hexkt T. Douglas, U. S. V., Marshal. 
NEW YORK.— Gov. B. B. Odell. Jr.; Brig. Gen. Edward M. Hoff- 
man, Adjutant General; Maj. Hawison K. Bird, Military 
Secretary, 



Aides.— Lieut. Col. E.S. Fowler, Capt. Wm. Lettaner,C.A. Sherrrill, 
Geo. F. Roth, Lieut. Commander A. B. Frv, Maj C. O. Davis; 
Capts. A. E. Mclutyre, J. T. Sadler, C. H. Ro.ss, J. J. Bvi-ne, 
S. P. White, C. J. DeBevoise, Lieuts. C. Mattock and W. L. 
Thompson. 

NATIONAL GUARD. 
Squadron A. — Maj. O. B. Bridgman, Commanding. 
Third Signal Corps. — Capt. E. J. Wheeler, Commanding 
First Signal Corps.— Capt. Oscar Erlandsen, Command-g. 
I'rovisional Battalion.— Lieut Col. Quick, Commanding. 
Twenty-third Regiment. — Lieut. Col. J. E. Brady, 
Commanding 

Frovisional Battalion. — Capt. W.J. Dunn, Commanding. 

VIRGINIA. 
First Battalion Volunteer 31illtia.— Lieut. Ernest M. 
Hardy, Commanding. 

NORTH CAROLINA. 

Lee Rifles of Charlotte. — • , Commanding. 

THIRD BRIGADE 
Brig. Geu. W. S. Metcalf, U. S. V., Marshal. 
TENNESSEE.— Cxovernor Benton McMillan and staff. 
OHIO.— Gov. Geo. K. Nash. 

NATIONAL GUARD. 

Fightli Regiment. — Col. Edward Vollrath, Commanding. 
ILLINOIS.— Gov. Richard Gates. 

Aides.— Cols. Walter Fieldhouse, John D. G. Oglesby, Edward G. 
Halle, David W. Ross, Edwin S. Conway, Cliarles E. Bleyer, 
William D. Washhuru, Ludwig Wolf, jr., William J. Oinzel- 
man, George W. Dixon, Edwin Norton, Charles R. Lyon, 
Isaac L. Elwood, Charles L. Walker, Charles H. Carmon, 
George T. Biickingham, J. O.scar Williams, Frederi 'k H. 
Smith, George R. Cottrell, John R. RnbertsTi, .Andrew J. 
Le*:ter, Louis E. Kiiine, Frank Kern. Randolph Smith, (ren-ge 
L. Pittinser. E. .Ardell Wells. George Fabyan. Fi-ederick A. 
Bangs. William J. Moxley, William Nelson, R. S. Crilchell, 
Joseph H. Strong, Lyman B. Cutler (Special Aide). 



NATIONAL GUARD. 

Co. H, Filth Infantry.— Capt. J. F. Cassell. 
Co. M, Fifth Infantry.— Capt. A. M. Matsiuger. 
Co. G, Fifth Infantry.- Capt. T. J. Simpson. 
Co. I, Fiftli Infantry.— Capt. E. C. Yickery. 
Troop G, Illinois Cavalry.— Capt. S. O.Tripp. 

MICHIUAN— Gov. Aaroa T. Bliss ; Brig. Gen. Geo. H. Brown, Ad- 
jutant General 

Staff.— Cols. Fred. W. Green, Inspector General ; James H. Kidd, 
Qiiartermas er General ; James N. Cox, Aide ; Fi-auk P. 
Graves, Aide; B. F. Kaufman, Aide: Wm M. Hatch, Aid ; 
Lieut -Cols. Geo. H. Turner, A.-;sistant Adjutant General; 
Wm. B. Kalmbach, A.ssisiant Inspector General ; S. H. Avery, 
Assistant Quartermaster (ieueral ; Herbert E. Johnson, Mil- 
itary Secretary; D. B. Duffield, Judge Advocate; R. W. Nor- 
ring oi, Assistant Adj.itant Geueral ; Chas. L. Boyntou, com- 
manding First Brigade, M. N. G. ; Chas W. Harrah, cnn- 
maading First Infantry ; Wm. T. McGurring, commanding 
Si 'CO id I ifaitry ; Robt. J. Bates, commanding Third Infantry : 
B. O. Newell, commanding First Ind. Battalion. 

MAINE.— National Guard. 



ProvLsional Battalion.- Maj. B. W. Welch, Commanding 
Co. M, Fir.st Infantry.— Capt. I. W. Graham. 
Co. C, Second Infantry.— Capt. W. R. Kimball. 
hignal Corp.s.— Lieut. G. W. Butler. 

TEXAS-National Guard. 
Troop 15, Fir.st Cavalry. Capt. Ormond Pagett. 
IOWA.— Gov. Leslie M. Shaw. 
NEBRASKA.— Gov. Cliarles H. Deitrich. 
WYOMING.— Gov. De Fon-est Richards. 
WASHINGTON, D. C. 
IMulith Inde|>cn(U-nt Battalion.— Maj. Abram Ack- 
with. Commanding. 

Butler Zouaves.— Capt. W. T. Thompson, Commanding. 

FOURTH DIVISION. 

Maj. Gen. Daniel E. Sickles, U. S. A. (retired), Marshal. 

Brig. Gen. J. W. Clous, U. S. V., Chief of Statf ; Capt. Henry A. 

Castle, U. S. V., Adjutant General. 

Veteran organizations. 



c 



The Ci*vic Grand Di'VisiOfi. 



Escort, Americus Club of Pittsbm-g, Pa. 

B. H. Warnek, Chief Marshal. 

Col. John C. Scofield, Chief of Staff; Capt. Martin R. Tliorp, Ad- 
jatatit Geueral 

Aides. 

District of Columbia >Ionuted Brigade. — Edward H. 

Droop, Commaudiug. 



FIRST DIVISION. 

Hon. J. D. McCleary, Marshal. 

FIRST BRIGADE. 

Hon. Thomas C. Noyes, Commanding. 

Lincoln Club, of New York City, George Gregory, 
Commanding. 

r~;i A. C. Hariner Republican Campaign Club, of Phila- 
delphia, Isaac p. Hetzell, Commanding. 



lunibus Olee Club, of Columbus, Ohio, George D. Free- 
Commanding. 

Tippecanoe Club, of (Jlevelaufl, Oliio, C. C. Morse, Com- 
niandiug. 

The Hamilton Club, of Chiragi, 111., W. Fieldhouse, 
Commanding. 

The J. C. Freeniont Association, of Iowa, Gilbert 
Folausbee, Commanding. 

SECOND BRIGADE. 
Hon. J. A. Wiedersheim, Commanding. 

West Chester Pioneer Corps, >o. 1., Capt. Howard 
Hawley, Commanding. 

The Hail Splitters of the Lincoln Chib, (ieorge 
Roulet, Commanding. 

Young' ]>Ien's irep. Club, Wilmingtoi, Del., Major Ed- 
ward Mitchell, Commanding. 

The Garrett A. Hobart Associal ion, \Y. O. Kenbler, 
Commanding. 

The Stamina IJep. League, of Cincinnati. Ohio, Capt. 
Henry J. Pfiester, Commanding. 

The Syracuse Escort I{cpi''>l'c ■" ( liib, Maj .r A. H. 
Gutstadt, Commanding. 

SECOND DIVISION. 

K. E. Cochran, M.ir.-lui!. 
FIRST BRIGADK 
General L. S. Brown, Commanding. 
The Frclinyhuysen Lancers Association, Major 
Jesse R. Salmon, Commanding. 

The Continental Club, of Philadelphia, Pa., John Jor- 
dan, Commanding. 



The Harrison Club, of Philadelphia, Pa., Capt. Alex. 
Crowe, Jr., Commanding. 

W. N*'. Greist Club, Lancaster, Pa., Capt. E. F. Frailey, 
Commanding. 

C. P. Huntington Rep. League, of Newixirt >.'ews. 
Ya., Major John Oast, Commanding. 

SECOND BRIGADE 
Hon. Lloyd B. Huff, Commanding. 

T'nioM County Itepublican Conimitt. c, of New Jer- 
sey, Hon. Hamilt n Fish, Commanding. 

Third Congressional District (of Md.) Association, 
Hon. Fi'ank C. Wachter, Commanding. 

The 'Frisco Line Cowboy Band, Oklahoma, Maj. Zack 
MuUhall, Commanding. 

Hnoscvelt Kepublican Club, of St. Paul, Minn., Maj. 
N. C. Kobiusou, Conmianding. 

TopeUa Kepublican Flanibt-au Club, of Kansas, ('apt. 
W. S. Eberle, Commanding. 

Hepublican League, of Atlanta, Ga., Hon. J. F. Hanson, 
Commanding. 

Minneapolis Kepublican Flambeau (. lub, of Minne 
apolis. Capt. Frank P. Nantz, Commanding. 

Hariy S. Scoit Seventh \Vard K< publican Asso- 
ciation, Philadelphia, Capt. James Scott, Commaudiug. 

THIRD DIVISION. 

Maj. Gen. O. O. Howard, U. S. A., Marshal. 

FIRST BRIGADE. 

Hon. J. Stuart McDonald, Commanding. 

Union League of 3Iarjland, . CouimaudiMg. 

Taylor l>istrict Kepubli<an < liib ,if Virginia. Hon. 
A. C. Walter, Commanding. 

United Itepublican Club, of Philadelphia, Pa., Hon. G. 
E. Fischer, Commanding. 

Phoenix Kepublican Club, of San Francisco, Cal., Hon. 
Julias Kahn, Commanding. 



Blooming-ton Zouaves, Bloomington, lud., Capt. A. J. 
Bundy, Commanding. 

Jolins Hoi>kiiis College Cadots, Baltimnre, Md., J. 
Abuer Taylor, Jr., Commanding. 

Columbian University Cadets, District of Columbia, 
Adolph E. L. Johnson, Commanding. 

Georgetown University, Captain Duffy, Commanding. 

University Cadets, Morgautown, W. Va., J. M. Burns, 

Commanding. 

(JalliUidet College Cadets, District of Columbia, George 
< r. W. Andrews, Commanding. 

<irove City College, Grove City, Pa., S. M. Gardner, Com- 
manding. 

Active ]>Iaryland Kepublioan Assoeiation, F. B. 
Metzerott, Commanding. 

Wilson Post Guard, Baltimore, Md., Col. G. W. F. Bm-u- 
ham. Commanding. 

Association Cadets, Y. M. C. A., District of Columbia, 
Lieut. Bruce Magruder, Commanding. 

Agricultural College Cadets, College Park, Md., Maj. 
W. W. Cobey, Commanding. 

Carlisle Indian School Cadets, Maj. W. G. Thompson, 
Commanding. 

Y. M. C. A. Association, District of Columbia. 

SECOND BRIGADE. 
Hon. Judson W. Lyons, Commanding. 

J. Tv. Goodall I{ei>ul»lican Beneticial Associa, ion, 

Philadelphia, Pa., Frank R. Burton, Commanding. 

Blaine Invincible liepublican Club, Washington, 
D, C, J. M. Mathews, Commanding. 

Fleischniann Bepublican Club, of Cincinnati, Ohio. 
Capt. R. Moore, Commanding. 

Virginia Republican League, of Washington, J. H. Har- 
rison, Commanding. 

General Grant Republican Club, St. Denis, Md., Capt. 
Thomas Sims, Commanding. 



nation al « Park « Seminary 

FOR YOUNG WOMEN - 
WASHIJVGTOJsr, 2). C. SV'Bl/'R'B^ 











mentsof Ct.iv.i-i 
at the NatioiKil i 
from the rigois < 
Ball. Hiiwliim, ( 
biiildin-s-l.ii.r: 
Com-'- .ii -I I 

tinil. Clinillih- 



Abiin.hi 
lions: IT 



f-, — .- "'^"->,. 








f tlioiightful parents bocai 

IV. Ji mii]Ul,-v i]',,iii \V:i~ 


sc of its 

lIv'.llKl 




ll,|.:,rl. 
l:,l Life 
iii\ IVce 

l;:i-^liCt 



Cli 



lis K> 



Students carefully selected and snpervised as to habits, ni.i nn-is, nvsucia- 
tions, etc. Provision inade for Pleasure and Happiness .i- w ill ,i ~ -I udy. 
See our calendar of Pleasant Home FTappenings. Expin-.^ -i_'i i.)j.ji.5. 
Early application necessary. Thirty-three ."States represmiiil la^i si-uson. 
send for catalogue giving views of the school and opinions of enthusiastic 
patrons. Address 

National Park Seminary, Box 100, Forest Glen, Md. 



The InaLU^viration irv the Year 2001. 



3 



George McKiuloy Barriugton, of the State of Ontario, was to- 
day at high 110 311 invested with the office of President of the 
United States of the Americas. The ceremonies attending the 
inauguration were the most elaborate in the history of this coun- 
try, and were made the more significant as being the fii-st cere- 
mony of tlie kind iii the Twenty-first Ceutiu-y. Not less than 
$10,000,000 was expended on the celebration, and more than 10,000,- 
003 p3ople witnessed a:id participated in the exercises. President 
Barringtou is the tenth Chief Magistrate to be elected to the new 
term of eight years, and he was accorded such a reception as has 
never before been witnessed in this city. 

The inaugural parade was thirty-six miles in length, and 
despite the fact that those participating were carried in aeroplanes, 
aerialautos, and other conveyances from the Mansion of Execu- 
tives to the Capitol, the line occupied more than three hours in 
passing the State aerialtrans, and slightly delayed the programme 
as originally proposed. The State aerialtrans left the Mansion of 
Executives at 9 o'clock, and was stationed at the head of the 
Avenue of the Americas, down which, at an altitude of about 300 
feet from the pavement, the parade approached. With President 
Harrington in the airship were Vice President Harris, ex-President 
Brown, and ex-Vice President Thompson, the members of the 
going Cabinet, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the 
President of the Chamber of Territories, and a number of other 
Government officials. Mr. Sterling, Secretary of State for the 
Philippines, was unable to attend, owing to a severe hurricane on 
the Pacific, which blew his aerialtrans from its course and com- 
pelled him to make the trip via Cape Horn with gi-eat delay. 

Every city in the Union was represented in the parade by one 
or more conveyances, and the decorations were unique and beauti- 
f al. Among the finer displays were those of clubs from Sitka, 
Santaigo de Chile, Montreal, Rio de Jauerio, Mexico City, Havana, 
Manila, Honolulu, Qaeb3c, St. Thomas, Chicago, and New York. 



Detachments from forts all o^-er thj coautry occupied the war 
machines, which made a brilliant spectacle as they swept past the 
rev iewing air ship. The i:ew 30-inch gun was in evidence on 
many of the war machines, and during a drill later in the day a 
shell was thrown into the Chesapeake bay, outside Baltimore. 

At the new Capitol the scene was one of activity. From early 
in the morning until the noon hour the crowds had accumulated 
until nearly a half million people had been packed into the great 
glass-covered arena which fronts the east facade of the new Capitol 
building. From the Department of Transportation on the right 
to the Department of the Press on the left was a solid line of spec- 
tators which taxed the enormous Crystal Auditorium to its utmost 
capacity. Four great automatic bands were placed in the corners of 
the space and, operated by buttons, simultaneously rendered a 
programme of popular music. 

The route of the parade compelled the line to turn at the De- 
partment of Oil Lands, and, after cutting across Haiina Avenue, 
proceeded down the Avenue of the States to the State aerialtrans. 
Then, headed by the President's conveyance, the line returned 
over the Avenue of the States to the Capitol. As the President 
passed over each of the State arches he was saluted by a volley of 
electrical bombs, the number of shots designating the order in 
which each State was admitted into the Union. The appearance 
of the President was the signal for a great demonstration on the 
part of the spectators who crowded the route in airships, and 
watched the line from the gardens on the roofs of the buildings 
along the Avenue of the Americas and the Avenue of the States. 
The ceremony passed off without a single mishap, and Grand Mar. 
shal Burns and his staff of 1,000 aides are to be commended for 
keeping the atmosphere between the avenues clear of conveyances- 
The police and medical aeroplanes were ever in evidence, and the 
corps performed efficient work. 

On reaching the Capitol the President and his party landed at 



the public station on top of the dome and proceeded iu elevators to 
th" State wing, where the new official was formally greeted by 
the members o'f the Senate, House of Representatives and Chamber 
o£ TeiTitories. It was a distinguished throng— the forty members 
of the pissing Cabinet, the Supreme and Vice Supreme Courts, the 
3:3() Senators, 860 Representatives, 99 Territorial Delegates and 
scores of statesmen, and Army and Navy officials being present. 
Secretary Garner, of the Department of Telegraphs and Cables, 
was the first to gi-eet Mr. Barriugton, and presented him with sym- 
pthacables from the Congress of the British Republic ; President 
(riiorland, of the United States of Germany ; King Louis XXI. of 
l<^-ani-e ; President Arcolie, of the Republic of Italy, and President 
Oin:-rot! of the Republic of Spain and Portugal. No word was 
received from Russia, owing to the recent death of the Czar. 

Escorted by hundreds of statesmen, the new and the old Presi- 
dmits made their way to the platform facing the Crystal Audi- 
torium The four great mechanical bands struck up the national 
anthem and the vast gathering cheered itself hoarse. As the can- 
didate of the American party and the choice of all three Houses of 
Congress, Mr. BaiTington is very popular, and received a royal 
ovation After taking the oath of office the new President deliv- 
ered his inaugural address, which will be found on another page. 
His spsech was remarkable for its brevity, and yet for the numer- 
ous recommendations made. Among these is the siiggestion that 
th.- work of turning the Arctic current aside, off the coast ot 
Labrador, so as to enable the Gulf Stream to change the climate, 
be bet^un at once, and that the anti-trust law prohibiting any cor- 
poration from making profits in excess of six per cent, per year, be 
strictly enforced. „ . , . , 

At the close of his address. President Barrington was escorted 
to the Mansion of the States by the Governors of the 118 States 
and 91 Territories. Here a great banquet was spread lu the mam 
hall, covers being laid for 25,000 persons. All of the Goverument 
officials and the heads of the Army and Navy were present, and 
many notable addresses were delivered thi-ough the phonelegraph. 

Late iu the afternoon a carnival was held on the lower pave- 
ment of the Avenue of the Americas. The spectators were ar- 
ranged on the upper malleable glass pavement and in the lower 
floods of the buildings along the thoroughfare. The glass cauopy 
over the Avenue was handsomely decorated with silken streamers, 
while the flags of all the Republics were plentifully distributed. 



The progi-amme included a parade of the President's Guard (foot) 
and the "crews of the naval submarine and aerial vessels Hector, 
Dewey, Schlev, Sampsou, Buenos Ayres and Holland. The evolu- 
tion of the aerial forces with the new meteorite guns were de- 
servedly applauded, and the great tubes were raised and lowered 
bv the Operation of the gas in the jackets. The Pneumatic street 
railway lines were stopped on all surface tracks and the avenues 
kept clear. ., ,„ , , , <ir\ij 

Later, at 16 o'clock, and lasting uutil 18 o'clock, an Old 
Century" parade was made the feature, and created much merri- 
ment In the grotesque line were ancient vehicles known as 
"automobiles," "locomobiles" and "glides." Other features 
were " bicycles " from the Museum of the Americas, and an elec- 
tric street car from the New York State Museum. Ancient steam 
engines found iu the States of Manitoba and Assmiboia were con- 
veyed oil pneumatic drags. . . . 

To-night the Inaugural concert and ball is in progress in the 
Park of the Presidents. The scene is a brilliant one, the acres of 
bright-colored glass canopy being reflected from above, by vari- 
colored lipthalite lamps, on the tinted glass flooring. Twenty 
thousand couples participated in the programme of dances, and 
many distinguished foreigners who arrived late in the afternoon 
by private air yachts were present. .,,,.,, . ^ ■, , 

In the city the aveuues were all beautifully illummated by 
means of lipthalite lights, which shoue through the glass sides ot 
buildint^ and residences, and caused diamond rays to form in the 
center of the thoroughfares. A night parade of ajnaltrans and 
other conveyances was another feature, all of the vessels being 
illuminated and making a wonderful spectacle. The programme 
for to-morrow includes a parade of National Militia, 100,000 strong, 
and submarine vessel war tactics in the Potomac river. The cele- 
bration will continue until March 8, when the President will be 
formally installed by Congress. _ . ^ t, •<. 

Hundreds of thousands of people continue to pour into the city. 
The Southern, Northerii, Central and Trans-Pueumatic railways 
are operating more than one hundred trains per hour from San 
Francisco, Vancouver, Rio, and other main junctions, while the 
rerial transcontinental lines are taxed to their utmost cap.xoity. 

The Inaugural Committee is hard at work aud accommoda- 
tions are plentiful. The Great Central Ho.el aloue had 19,003 
rooms reserved and ready this morning, and the other public quar- 
ters are well filled. All in all, the celebration is worthy of the 
new ceutui-y. and will make a striking comparison with the In- 
auguration of March 4, 1901, an account of which is reproduced 
elsewhere iu this issue. 



3 




Broadway and 
Rineieentb Si 

new Vork City 



Carpef$ * Rugs « tipbolstery 
Classical Turnlture 
Interior Decorations 



UlcrK done in all parts of tbc 
United States 

t|^^ Write for booklet ! 



Daniel Fkasek 
President 



Paul L. Webb 
Secretary 



The Norris Peters Co. 
PHOTO-LITHOGRAPHERS 

458 and 460 Pennsylvania Ave. 

WASHINGTON, D. C 

^^" WE nOVE flNTTHINQ "=^ 

nERcti/qNr5 

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We "Will be pleased to mail you our Price List on Developing, Printing and 
Mounting. We guarantee all worli. Mail orders promptly filled. 



The Geo. W. Knox Express Co. 



Bciggcicie ccilled for and delivered 
llccivv luiuling and erecting 60 <?o 
Ereigl^r deliver/ agents P. R. R. 
sroraflc. PacKing and shipping House- 
hold goods:=^ ^^ 



1419 Penm. Ave. N. W. ^^Tc°7°' 



ESTABLISHED 1814 



3 



DEPOSITORY OF THE UNITED STATES 

T|e)lalional|IIe(ropolilaDBaDl 



WASHINGTON. D. C. 



CflPIT^L, $300,000 SURPLUS UNO UNDIVIDED PROFITS, 8555,000 

No. 613 FIFTEENTH STREET N. W. 



JOHN T. ARMS 
Real Estate 

MYRON M. Parker 

Real Estate 

HENRY Hurt 

Capitalist 

W. H. MOSES 
Furniture and Carpets 



DIRECTORS 

E. S. Parker jno. Joy edson 

Pres. Wash. Loan & Trust Co. 
WM. B. GURLEY H. K. WILLARD 

Broker Real Estate 

JNO. B. LARNER JAS. B. WIMER 

Attorney-at-Law Real Estate 

S. W. WOODWARD 
Drv Goods 



OFFICERS 

E. S. PARKER, President 

S. W. WOODWARD, Vice-President 
J. Gales MOORE, Cashier 

W. W. W. PARKER, Ass't Cashier 



Accounts of Banks, Corporations, Firms and Individuals Solicited 
Letter* of Credit for Travelers, Available in All Parts of the World 



Atlantic llillf Transport 





FROM 

NEW YORK 

(Weekij- .Service 

PHILADELPHIA BALTIMORE 

(.\bout Every Ten Days) 

TO LONDON 



S.S. "MINNEHAHA," IS.OOOtons 
S. S. "MINNEAPOLIS," 15,000 fs 
S.S. "MARQUETTE," 10,000 fns 
S.S. "MENOMINEE, "10, OOOtons 
S. S. "ME5ABA," 10,000 tons 
S.S. "MANITOU," 10,000 tons 
S. S. "MANHATTAN," I3,000fns 



S.S. "MICHIGAN," 14,000 tons 
S.S. "MACKINAW," 5,500 tons 
S. S. "MARYLAND," 4,000 tons 
S.S. "MINNESOTA," 5,500tons 
S.S. "MONTANA," 4,000 tons 
S.S. "MAINE," 4,000 tons 
S. S. "MOHAWK," 5,000 tons 



The New York Service is equipped with Large New 
Electric-Lighted, Steam-Heated Steamers, carrvino- only 
first-cabm passengers. All cabins on deck. Thorough 
ven'ilation. '^ 



234 La SaUe St., Chicago, 111. 
403 Water Street, Baltimore. 
Bourse Building, Philadelphia. 



Guaranty Loan BIdg., Minneapolis, Minn. 
X Broadway, New York. 
108 Fenchurch Street, London. 




U. S. PATENT OFFICE 



3 



Mason, Fenwick & Lawrence 

ESTABLISHED ISiil 

PATENT LAWYERS 

SOLICITORS AND EXPERTS 

Practice before the Commissioner of Patents and tlic 
Federal Courts 

602 F Street N. W.. WaLshington. D. C. 

Valunbie Guide Boi)k on Patenis FREE 
Re.ieoteil npii]i,-atiniis |.i-.wf-,-nt.rl. Tm.le Murk^ rf L-islf n .1- 



ELLIS S P E A R 

FORMERLY COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS 

Attorn ey-at-La w 
Solicitor of Patents 

1003 F St. n. w. Washington. D. C. 



PPIMDLIl&IXiSSIiLL 

A^brnevs ^^n^i Couf\selloi\s (\\ Uiw^ 

no. r)(K) 5i:\'i:\'Tii >i . x'. w. 
WcLshincjton, I). C 

S|M'( icillics: U.5. & F()rci(|i\ mreats diui PiilciUQiuses 



p. T. Dodge \V. R. KenneJv 

PHILIP T. DODGE 



U. S. and Foreign Pat- 
ents obtained promptly 
and with special regard 
to tlie legal protection 
of the invention. : : 
Patent litigation and interference 
proceedings conducted. 
Opinions as to patenta- 
bility of inventions and 
scope and validity of 
patents rendered. : : 
Designs, trade marks, 
labels and copyrights. 

LOAN AND TRUST BUILDING 
Washing^ton, D. C. 



BALDWIN 
DAVIDSON & WIGHT 



PATENT LAWYERS 
AND SOLICITORS 
Trade Marks Registered 

= 5 Grant PI., WashiriKlon, D. C. 
14 1 Broadway. New York City. 



Established 18^9 



United States and 
Foreign Patents : 
AND Patent Causes 



LOAN m mi: imm 



F 



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WASHINinoN. ll C. 



Wi; WILL HCHISE YuliR 



AUTOMOBILE 



an J care for it for $12 per m. 
Transient. $t a day ; 

Will deliver and call for on 
day, $5 per month extra : 



Charging Station No. i. 
Rear of ijjg K Street N. W. 

Office, N.Y.Ave. & uth St. Tel, 1 



Good Electrician a: 
Repairer in Charge 



Capital City Storage 

HOUSE : : Edward Reynolds 




/^CUDE&BRO 



G. W.ARFIHLI) SIMPSON 



"Quality" Tailoring 

a specialty ! It is the 
most economical and 
the most " satisfy- 
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1208 F ST. NORTHWEST 



T. W. Grimes 

SPRING NOVELTIES 
LADIES' SUITINGS 
FRENCH AND ENGLISH 
IMPORTATIONS: : : : : 



1737. DE. SALES ST. 



SMOOT, COFFER 
^McCALLEY^*- 

1216 F STREET 
NORTHWEST 

High-Class Novelties and 
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Dress Goods, Robes, 
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O.NE OF TH Sigh 
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SHERRAT'S 
CHINA 
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608 13th St N.W. 



An e.xquisite line of 
Hand-Painted China of every 
description. Beautiful bric-a- 
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VISITORS WELCOME 



Inventions Designs Trade-.Marks 
JAS. L. EWIN 

Registered Attorney No. 7, 
United States Patent Oflice. 
and E.Xpert in Patent Causes 

Wash'n Loan & Trust Bldg., Sth floor 

900 F St, N.W., Washington, D.C 



J. E. BERRY_ 



RALEIGH 

EBBITT 

WILLARD'S 

Stables 

BOARDING and LIVERY 
First - Class Carriages for 
Weddings, Receptions and 
Shopping.-Phone iVlain 1865 



^1354 C ST. N.W. 

Woodward 

& 

Lothrop 



Qr^J-f T TT'7 ^ Opposite Arlington Hotel v^ 

■ ^Jy^ll L J 1 Z^ ^ WASHINGTON, D. C. ^ 



3 




We have made special arrangements for the 
benefit of our many out-of-town patrons who 
may wish to take away some memento of the 
Inauguration. Nothing is more pleasing to the 
feminine mind than a Souvenir in the shape of a 
HANDSOME TAILOR'MADE GOWN 
or a dainty creation similar to those we are 
showing after the most approved French modes 
for evening or reception wear. We are also ex- 
hibiting the latest styles in Coats and Opera 
Cloaks, and are unexcelled in the building of 
the correct. English Riding Habit. 



LT^DieS- TKILOR KIND DR ESS7VT A KE R 



1864 




1901 
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Rapid, Legible and Beautiful 
Writing. 

Tliorough English. 

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f-;ih 



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Spencerian Business College 

Academy of Music Building, Cor. Ninth ami 1 

Education for Real Life for Sons and Daughter 



X. W. .Mrlhedl. Vocal 
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Telei'hoxe iL\iN 'Ji'jO; 

E. B. WARREN & COMPANY 

Cor. Twenty-Seventh and H Sts. N. W., Washington, 
PREPARED ROQFING 

TARRED FELT. 
IPly. 2. Ply. 3-Ply 

BUILDING PAPERS, 

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BUILDING PAPERS, 

ROSIN SIZEQ. 

DEADENING FELTS, 
CARPET LININGS. 



TIN CAPS and NAILS. 

PITCH, 

Small and r.arge Barrels, 
Diflerent Grades. 

COAL (or GAS) TAR, 

By the Barrel or Gallon. 

JAPAN-BLACK VARNISH 

•'or Iron. Brick and Wood Uork 
L'.jcand Wlcjii-r trail.. n. 



ASPHALT, SLAG FOR ROOFING, OILS OF COAL-TAR, DEODORANTS 

VERMICIDES AND DISINFECTANTS. ASBESTOS GOODS OF ALL KINDS 

HAIR FELTS. SLAG AND FELT ROOFING AND ROOF-PAINTING. 

AU work ;;ua raijtee.l. Prompt delivery. Write or telephone for samples, 

t.ims.nid i.iics. Articles not in this list we can supply. f)ur stocli 

an. I rcv.Mircesare large. I.ilieral di.=counl to tlie trade. 

Prices subject to change wilhinit notice. 



V. ZALESAK 

[Late of Vienna and with Worth, of Paris] 



LADIES' TAILOR 



1022 Connecticut Avenue 
WASHINGTON, D. C. 




VIEW or WASHINGTON 



1 



Equitable 



Co-Operative 
Building- Association 
1003 F street N. W. 



S H A li i: S , $2.50 31 O N I H L Y 

It yields fair aud reliable profits to its shareholders on their 

monthly paymeuts oa stock. 
It provides thr sm-est way for its members to lay a foandatioa to 

si'ciuT hoiii, < and other property. 
It advaiir.s iiii.iiry to its members at fair rates of interest and 

upon advantageous tei'ms. 
Its constant aim is to make, as Dear as possible, the advantages and 

benefits mutual and ecjual to the shareholders, both borrowers 

and investors, and to do business upon a safe, legitimate basis. 

John Jot Ed.son-, Fkank P. Reeside, 

/'ifsidai/. Sccittarv. 



h Wasninglon Loan ano Trosi Gontpany 

Corner of Ninlh and F Sts. N. W. 



Paid Up Capital, $1,000,000 



Surplus, $275,000 



Organized under the Laws of the United States and 
subject ti« the supervision of the Treasury Department 
EXECUTKS ALL TRUSTS ..Im lidiiciary character, acts as K.xeeutor, .' 
Ntraic.i-, iMs.al A-.-iit il^mstrar, Depository for Churclies, Lodg 



'lul 



id ..111, 



A-s 



LOANS MONEY oil ai.pn.v. d ival estate, and marketable collateraL 
RECEIVES MONEY on DEPOSIT subject to check, and allows interest thereon 
REAL ESTATE DEPARTHENT, renting, repairing, selling and insurino- 

property, paying taxes, etc., for absent owners and others. 
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTHENT, rents private safes and provides storage for 

silverware and valuables in flre and burglar proof vaults. 
OFFICE ROOMS for rent in the Company's fire-proof ten-story office build- 
ing, u men piiss..ss every modern convenience. 
OFFICE HOURS ln.m9a. m. to 3 p. m. Safe deposit vaults open from <.\ a 
in, t.i 4 p. Ill ( 111 1st, loth and last days of each mouth open to receive 
aejiusits until t.:;n p. m. 

.10H^ JOr EDSON, Pbesicb.n-t. 



Ralph W. Lee 

Real Estate, Loans 
Rents, Insurance... 

REPRESENTING 
New Hampshire Fire Insurance Co 
Manchester Assurance Co., of England 
Queen Insurance Co.. of America 
Phoenix Insurance Co., of Hartford 
St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. 
United Fire Insurance Co., of Baltimore 
Western Assurance Co., of Canada 

1406 G STREET N. W. 'Phone 2049 



K. ED.MONSTl 
President 



.Seerelarv 



Titles to P^eal Estate in the District 
°f Columbia Ejcamined. Certified, *^ 
Guaranteed and Insured. Settlement 
of .Vales and Loans .Superintended 



I 500 FIFTH ST. N. W., Washington. P. C. 




wj T ¥ T l^f T> W 1^ f^ The largest establishment in the South 
* *^ ^ ^ * ■■^ * X ^ V-» ^^devoted exclusively to Plumbing 



— Plumbing that stands for the standard of high-grade work ^ <>f W 

R. B, CAVERLY 




STONE'S 
STRAWS 

SWEET. CLEAN 
HEALTHFUL 

Adding Delight 
to Drinks ^ ^ 



Factory, 109-111 Chicago 
Street. "« ^ Northea.st 

WASHINGTON. D. C. 



Show Rooms 

504-506 Tenth St 



GEO. A. FULLER CO. 

Fire-Proof 
Building 
Construction 

Nkw York (Home Office) 137 Broadway 

Chicago Office, Marquette Building 
Boston Office, Brazer Buildiug 

Baltimore Office, Atlantic Trust Building 
Philadelphia Office, Siephen Girard Building 
Washington Office, 509 Fourteenth St. N, W. 



3 



KicHARDsoN & Burgess 

CONTRACrORS AND BUILDERS 
013 I^^OTJRTEENXH: SXREET N". "W. 

TELEPHONE MAIN" 1659 
TELEPHONE MAIN 76 S 

Washington, D. C. 



CHARLES A. LANGLEY 
CAR.PENTER. 5 AND 5 BuiLDER 

510 12th St. Northwest 
Wacshington , D . C . 
TELEPH ONE 134 

Jobbing and Repairing Solicited and Proimptly 
Attended to. WorU. on Percentage a Specialty 



JAMES L. PARSONS 

CONTRACTOR 
AND BUILDER 

Room 309 1425 NY A VE. 



Builder of many Private and Public 
Buildings in Washington 



Reference by permission to the following Ladies and Qentlemen : 

Hon. Sani'l Sihellabargei-, SI2 17th St. Wm. J. Boarclman. ISOl P St 

Afrv SI Si Oni- line VT LT A,... 11' .^ ii'i:.. .'...,. ^. "., 



Mrs. S. .S. Co.\, U08 N. H. .'^ . ._. 

Lieut. T. B. M. Mason, IBOti 20th St 

Mrs. Julian James, lii02 20th St. 

Capt. A. C. Tyler, 1634 I St. 

A. C. Barney, 1626 R. I. Ave. 

H L. Page & Co., Arch., 808 17th St, 



\V. C. \V 
Adm. I 
Mrs. Ja 
M. W. L 
Mrs. Gt'or;; 



Dr. F. B. Loring, 1420 K St 



V-li; X. H. Ave. 
rlrc.|,,,iUan (■lub 
■.\v.«n. 1723 K St. 
. list, 
il. 1400 JS". H. Ave. 



W. M. Poindexter, Arch., 808 17th St. J. G. Hill, Arch., 41, 43 Corcoran BIdg 



JOHJ^ H. JVOLAJV 

Contractor 
"'^^ 'Builder 

"Da-Ot'dson "Building, Fourth Floor 
1413 G ^1. JSf. W. Washington, 2). C. 




THE BRONCHO BUSTER." 



Presented to Col. Theodore Roosevelt at Camp Wikoff, Mou- 
tauk, L. I., Sept. 13, 1898, by the 'Tirst Volunteer Cavalry," 
known as the "Roosevelt Rough Riders." 




BltONZE DESIGNED BY FREDEKIC REMINGTON. 



"She Loving Cup 



Tiffany & Co., ne* yorr. makers. 



Presented by President McKiuley tu His Excellency, M. Jules Canihon 
Ambassador of France, to commemorate the Ambassador's good offices in 
the restoration of peace between the United States and Spain. 
TIFFANY 4. CO., NEW YORK. MAKERS. 



WHER.E TO STOP IN WASHINGTON 



J 



m 

I 



^0""^:^ 



The ST. JAMES^ 

-V» EX/'RO-PRAJW -PLAJ^ J^ 

on Pennsylvania Avenue and 6th Street, just across 
the street from the Pennsylvania Railroad Station, the 
Washington terminus of this Road and of the Chesa- 
peake & Ohio, Southern & Atlantic Coast Line. St- 
James Hotel porters are in attendance at the depot to 
meet all trains and to help patrons with luggage. 

Passengers reaching Washington by other lines 
or by boat can reach the St. James easily by bus or 
street car. 

Recently the St. James, one of the most homelike 
and comfortable hostelries in the city was 

"REJ^OVATET) THUOVGHOl/T 

It has Steam Heat, Electric Lights, and every modern improvement — many rooms with bath. The bed-rooms 
are models of comfort and cleanliness. The Dining-room and Cafe service is unexcelled. Rooms with bath 
reserved on notification in advance. 

LEVI taoo-D-Bvuy. Tropr. Rates, $1.00 per Day and upward h. t. wheblep^. rtngr. 




^^^JSvi^^^ 



1^ 

i 



THE SHOREHAM 

WASHINGTON, D. C. 



American and 
European Plan 



ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF 



nost fashionable part of the 
1 five minutes' walk of the 



EXECUTIVE MANSION, TREASURY, : : 
STATE, WAR and NAVY DEPARTHENTS 

JOHN T. OEVINE. Proprietor 



HOTEL JOHNSON 

L . J O H JS^ S O N , P K O P R I E T O K 

Penna. Ave., i3;h and E Sts. 
WASHINGTON, D. C. 

ROOMS EN SUITE OR SINGLE 
American Plan, $2.50 to $4.00 per day 
European Plan, $1.00 per day and up 

Advantageously situated for business or sight-seeing, in the shop- 
ping district, and near all places of amusement. Five minutes' 
walk to White House, Treasury, War, State and Navy Depart- 
ments, and Corcoran Art Gallery. 

„ „ Broiled Live Lobster, Lynn 

Se.\ Food Specialties ; jjaven and Cherry Stone Oysters 

FREE BUS MEETS ALL TRAINS 




Jlxe ^xlin^iou 



T. E. ROESSLE 

"Proprietor 



WASHINGTON, D. C 



iOTEL EHGEL 

El'I!(lPE.\N 

Cor. New Jersey Ave. aim C St. 

Op. 11. All. Ik-pcl. \V:i.-hui^'t..li. II. C 
W. A. ENGEL, Proprietor 

NEWLY REMODELED and 
REFURNISHED Throughout 

Rooms, $1 to $2.50 per day 



Flrst-Giass Bestaoiaiit attactieii 





Z^^ fl^otel lEssex 

BOSTON, MASS. 
Atlantic Avenue, Essex and East Streets 

[At .Main Kutrance Terminal ftilatioiij 

ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF 
EUROPEAN PLAN 
WITH tVERY MODERN IMPROVEMENT 

Fiiiishe.l, Furnisl,^,! and Opened 
in N I N K r E K N H U N U R K 1) 

F. A. HAMMOND, Pres. 



U--^ Hi) Charge for Baggage from aad to Above Stalioj 



' „ r'Q i Two BurroN Picrnt^ss 

n /,i,tPHO' 1 MADh f-i^OM ANir PlCTUHf 

mm ^-^--" f srNI us BY MAIL 25* 



459 a 939 Pa A- 



Ail I^IHDS OF BUTTON .li'j.fijJi 
AND PHOTO XOVELTIES 



Or ^LL PUBUG BUILDINGS 

10 ."f 







InsTJire VT-itli 




piaza Boie[^ 

Fifth Ave. Vy 58th & 

59th Streets, 

NEW YORK CITY 



■Ionian,) lhri:ii/ire On Ira/ 
I, id Plaza Square 



iiiiiiiii 






Rede 

ni-lied 

npholsl ^. 

ice on each floor, and other 

new featnres added : : : 



ited tlironghont, Iv 
/ith new carpets ai 
. telephone serv- 



't Mi 



w 



an Plans 

F. A. HAMMOND 



THE HOTEL LAWRENCE 

WASHINGTON, D. C. 



EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN 
v^ v§ s$ PL/A/VS N§ ^ v^ 



S. CASSEN H EI M ER. PROP'R 



THE RIGGS 



lE^iKE! i2srs-cri5^A^isrcE co:M:i=..f^n^^- 



•703 2^0-u.rteeiitli St. iT. ""^Tv^. 



■"s^7"asliixigtoxi, ^. C 






WOLFE'S AROMATIC SCHIEDAM SCHNAPPS 



ii;iiiiiiiMiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiii|iiiiiii| 

I Benefits | 

I Old I 

I ©end I 

I Young ! I 



Wolfe's Aromatic 
Schiedam ScKnaLpps 

■BBJ^iBriTW OL-D AJVH yO\/7^G 

^IPHE most effective tonic, diuretic and laxative 
^■^ on sale to-day is Wolfe's Aromatic Schiedam 
Schnapps. There is no doubt about what eminent 
doctors and nurses will tell j-ou. What adds to its 
worth is that it is so palatable. Everybody likes its 
taste and flavor. It can be given with equal benefit 
to the old, the middle-aged and to babies. Simpl}' 
a matter of proportional doses. For Senile Debilit}-, 
for Female Troubles, and for Infantile Ailments, it 
is the best of remedies. But be careful to get the 
genuine. Avoid all worthless substitutes, imitations 
and counterfeits. 



w 



LBW 



AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS 






y^. 



-?-f2-2^?, y7 



